User:Jnestorius/Junior ministers

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I think that, whereas the Constitution says ministers have the right to be heard in either house, it is the standing orders that extend this right to junior ministers?

Michael Gallagher 1987 comment:[1]

in a small parliament like the Dail, where about a third of government deputies are cabinet or junior ministers, every ambitious backbencher can entertain hopes of fairly rapid advancement provided he or she displays fidelity to the party line, and so there will be a temptation for able government backbenchers to be as supportive of their ministers in the forum of a committee as in the Dail chamber.

Magill 1982 article surveys.[2]

Garret Fitzgerald in 1995 regarded special advisers and programme managers as more useful to ministers than junior ministers, and the successive increases in the numbers of the latter as mistakes:[3]

while as Taoiseach I regretfully recognised the political necessity of filing the 15 poisitions once they had been provided for by law, I could never identify more than seven or eight significant taks that could with real advantage be devolved with delegated functions to a junior minister

Comments[edit]

Coakley & Gallagher:

  • Juniors cannot be on Oireachtas committees[4]
  • Juniors chosen for geographical balance; blood before promotion; in coalition often from different party to minister; rivals as credit for policy success, may be cut out by senior; good publicity for smaller parties e.g. Liz O'Donnell[5]
  • "super-juniors" are a fudge[6]
    • "With the exception of the Chief Whip, these are not entitled to attend government meetings unless invited specifically to talk about some matter affecting departmental responsibilities (although during the Rainbow Coalition of 1994-97 the Democratic Leftjunior minister Pat Rabbitte was allowed to attend all meetings, and the same facility was extended to the PD junior minister Bobby Molloy in the following government)."[5]

Tonra 2002:[7]

Since the early 1980s junior ministers at the Department of Foreign Affairs have tended to cover one of two functional areas of responsibility, either development aid or European affairs. In neither area have such junior ministers succeeded in achieving for themselves a significant political profile although the European affairs portfolio – which has been either jointly or exclusively assigned to the Department of the Taoiseach – has been perceived as a platform for later ministerial preferment. To date, no junior minister responsible for development aid has made it to the cabinet table

Connaughton 2017: "programme managers" introduced by Labour in 1992 [cross-dept function, in addition to civil service and ministerial advisers] were abolished in 1997 [except for Taoiseach and Tánaiste] with increased emphasis on junior ministers. "From 1997 onwards, an emphasis was placed on the role of ministers of state (junior ministers), whose numbers substantially increased."[8]

Sunday Business Post 2006:[9]

Garret FitzGerald 1980 and Tom Kitt 1995 in opposition opposed recent increases in numbers; Charlie McCreevy "said everyone knew many of these minister of state positions were non-positions and they should be abolished"; SBP said "non-jobs" in 2006 filled by Mary Wallace, Sile de Valera, Tim O'Malley, Sean Power, Pat 'The Cope' Gallagher and Batt O'Keeffe; and arguably Conor Lenihan.

T. Ryle Dwyer 2006:[10]

The Taoiseach selects the members of his cabinet, but the cabinet is supposed to appoint ministers of state. ... Of course, the cabinet's role in relation to ministers of state has usually been apparent only when a minister was being sacked. Then the Taoiseach would have to wait for a cabinet meeting to dispose of the outgoing person's services, as happened with Ivor Callely recently
1924 act s.7(1): "The Executive Council may from time to time, on the nomination of the President of the Council, appoint.."
1977 act s.1(1): "The Government may, on the nomination of the Taoiseach, appoint not more than 10 persons, who are members of either House of the Oireachtas"]
Whereas 1924 s.7(3) "A Minister who is not a member of the Executive Council may, with the approval of Dáil Eireann expressed by resolution, appoint a person being a member of the Dáil to be his Parliamentary Secretary" so limit of seven was not absolute till 1937 constitution abolished extern ministers. Were there any such extern parliamentary secretaries? Nope. Only 3rd and 4th Dáileanna had extern ministers, none of whom had a PS.

Noel Whelan:[11]

If the division of responsibilities at cabinet level is ad hoc and confused, the allocation of responsibilities and titles between ministers of state is even stranger. Apart from political anoraks, most people are blissfully unaware of the names, let alone the job titles or the departmental assignments of many of our ministers of state. The trend towards more ministers of state being assigned to a more peculiar range of functions is likely to continue however, not least because press statements from interest groups or policy documents from political parties which call for some issue or area of activity to be prioritised nearly always include a suggestion that the issue get its own minister of state.

SBP 2007:[12]

The semi-controversy about the increase in the number of junior ministers simply reflects one of the old traditions of Irish politics. ... consolation prize for areas not represented in the 'big 15'...also represent a nod to interest groups...In terms of duties, a Minister of State has few.

SBP 2012:[13]

Tension is the norm, as cabinet members try to retain good news announcements and publicity for themselves against their junior departmental colleagues' equal desire to retain autonomy over as many delegated responsibilities as they can. ... Joan Burton was right when she observed a few days ago that tales of the differences between cabinet ministers and their ministers of state are the stuff of political legend.

Eoin O'Malley 2012:[14]

2009 reduction to 15 "a political sop to the financial crisis". "While it was the case that junior ministers depended on their senior minister to provide a meaningful role, junior ministers now have reasonably clear areas of responsibility, and some can successfully pursue a certain agenda, though at all times the senior minister retains political responsibility. However, they still have few formal powers, as the government minister retains statutory functions and will bring relevant policies to cabinet. Some senior ministers and civil servants complain about the quality of junior ministers: that many are barely competent or have little interest in the policy area. It is not controversial to say that the expansion of junior ministers occurred for purely party political reasons and that their role is of limited importance."

Particular departments[edit]

What of multi-department: when was first? (Fennel 1983 at DofTaoi, not subsidiary Depts.) Any special difficulties? Single co-ordination function vs grab-bag of parallel delegations?

Taoiseach / Government[edit]

PS/MoS to the Government/ExCouncil is different from PS/MoS at the Dept of the Taoiseach/PrExCo -- check the relevant statutes for any difference. Perhaps limit of one PS per Dept made this a useful equivalent of "minister without portfolio".

Government Chief Whip is PS/MoS at the Dept of the Taoiseach/PrExCo. [sole PS, one of several MoS] What if coalition? More generally, are there separate party whips in a coalition?

Defence[edit]

PS Def is on council of def. Often same person is PS Taoiseach (one exception -- not the only one -- was when Dev was T & Min Ext Aff: same person was PS in those two depts, while another was PS Def). Sometimes neglect to appoint PS Def; 1950 IIRC, also 1973-6.[15]

Gaeltacht[edit]

Is there much evidence of a junior minister for the Gaeltacht either:

  • from 1956-92 where (as often the case) the cabinet minister at the Dept of the Gaeltacht had another portfolio
  • from 1992 on when the portfolio was broader than the Gaeltacht. Some of the following also had a second MoS brief from another Dept. Some appointments specify parallel for each Dept, others all-in-one even where dissimilar.
    • 1993-94 govt the Department of the Gaeltacht absorbed into Department of Arts, Culture and the Gaeltacht, with junior minister for the Gaeltacht (Pat "the Cope" Gallagher) under minister Michael D. Higgins.
    • But 1995-97 govt had "Western Development and Rural Renewal" as only junior, and that shared with Taoiseach.
    • 1997-2002 MoS "Gaeltacht and the Islands" dept "Arts, Heritage, Gaeltacht and the Islands"
    • 2002-2007 Mos "Drugs Strategy and Community Affairs" dept "Community, Rural and Gaeltacht Affairs"
    • 2007-2011 Mos "Drugs Strategy and Community Affairs", "Integration Policy" / (from 2010) "Equality and Human Rights; and Integration" dept "Community, Rural and Gaeltacht Affairs" (to 2010) / "Community, Equality and Gaeltacht Affairs"
    • 2011-2016 Mos "Gaeltacht Affairs" / (2014) "Gaeltacht Affairs and Natural Resources" "New Communities, Culture and Equality" dept "Arts, Heritage and the Gaeltacht"
    • 2016-2020 Mos "Gaeltacht Affairs and Natural Resources" "Regional Economic Development" / (2017) "Gaeilge, Gaeltacht and the Islands" dept "Arts, Heritage, Regional, Rural and Gaeltacht Affairs" / (2017) "Culture, Heritage and the Gaeltacht"
    • 2020-date Mos "Gaeltacht and Sport" dept "Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media"


Compare sole min, no PS: Tom O'Donnell 73-77; Denis Gallagher 77-79, Máire Geoghegan-Quinn 79-81; Paddy O'Toole 81-2; Pádraig Flynn Mar-Oct 82; Denis Gallagher Oct-Dec 82;

Laws[edit]

Act Max Other
1924 7
  • 7.—
(1) The Executive Council may from time to time, on the nomination of the President of the Council, appoint so many persons, being members of the Oireachtas and not exceeding seven in number as the Executive Council shall consider necessary, to be Parliamentary Secretaries to the Executive Council or to Executive Ministers, and may at any time remove any Parliamentary Secretary so appointed.
(2) Every person appointed under the next preceding sub-section to be a Parliamentary Secretary shall continue to hold office so long only as he continues to be a member of the Oireachtas and the President of the Executive Council by whom he was nominated continues to hold office.
(3) A Minister who is not a member of the Executive Council may, with the approval of Dáil Eireann expressed by resolution, appoint a person being a member of the Dáil to be his Parliamentary Secretary and may at any time remove a Parliamentary Secretary so appointed.
(4) Every person appointed under the next preceding sub-section shall continue to hold office only so long as he continues to be a member of the Dáil and the Minister by whom he was appointed continues to hold his office.
(5) There shall be paid out of moneys provided by the Oireachtas to each Parliamentary Secretary appointed under this Act who shall not by his appointment be declared to be appointed without salary such annual salary not exceeding in any case the annual sum of £1,200 as shall from time to time be fixed by the President of the Executive Council, with the consent of the Minister for Finance: Provided however that the total number of persons who shall at any one time be in receipt of salaries as Ministers or as Parliamentary Secretaries shall not exceed fifteen.
(6) Not more than one Parliamentary Secretary shall be appointed in respect of any one Department of State.
(7) Each of the Parliamentary Secretaries appointed under this section shall by his appointment be assigned to act as Parliamentary Secretary to the Executive Council or to a Minister and shall have such powers and perform such duties as the Executive Council or such Minister with the consent of the Executive Council (as the case may be) may from time to time delegate or assign to him.
  • 8 [...]
a civil member being a member of Dáil Eireann who shall be responsible to the Minister for Defence for the finance of the Military Defence Forces and for so much of the other business of the Council of Defence as may be from time to time assigned to him by the Minister for Defence and who shall act as Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Defence
1938 7 sec.2 + sched repeals sec.7(5) of 1924, and sec.3(4) imposes limit of 22 [15 + 7] people receiving salary.
1939 7 sec.8 right of audience in either house; sec.7 not resign if minister temporarily replaced due to incapacity; sec.9 "the power of delegation of duties to Parliamentary Secretaries provided for in Section 7(7) of the Act of 1924 shall be extended to include statutory powers and duties"[16]
1954 17 replaces 1924 sec.8 with new Council of Defence; "(2) The Council shall consist of two civil members, namely, the Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Defence and the Secretary of the Department of Defence, and three military members, namely, the Chief of Staff, the Adjutant-General and the Quartermaster-General."
1977 Ministers 10 sec.2 restates sec.9 of 1939 act (except that delegation continues in caretaker period when Taoiseach resigns or Dáil dissolved); sec.1 replaced sec.7 of 1924 act; differences are: 10 > 7 limit; caretaker stay in office; no extern ministers; no limit of one MoS per DoS; ; no equiv of "PS to the Exec Co", only "MoS at DoS".
1977 Allowances 10 sec.6 imposes limit of 25 [15 + 10] people receiving salary
1980 15 Auto resign if appointed minister; can resign voluntarily; ought to have increased limit from 25 to 30 people receiving salary but neglected to do so; see 1992.
1991 13 Min and MoS dq from loc auth dual mandate.
1992 15 sec.15 Backdated to 1980, sec.3(4) of 1938 [limit of 22 salaries] repealed
1995 17 none
1997 11 super-junior can employ 2 advisers, same as senior minister; other junior can only have 1.
2007 20 none

Salary[edit]

Until 1973 amount specified in act; thereafter in SI.

Date Act or SI Amount (£) Amount (€)
1924 Act 16 of 1924 s.7(5) 1,200 max
1994 SI 1994/303 s.4(d) 18,463
1995 SI 1994/303 s.4(d) 19,620
2005 SI 2005/807 s.3(2) 48,215

1920[edit]

Owing to the inability of the Secretary for Irish to devote sufficient time to the duties of the position, Proinnsias O Fathaigh (Galway, South) had been appointed as Assistant Minister

1921[edit]

The PRESIDENT. The MINISTER FOR FINANCE. The ASSOCIATE MINISTER FOR FOREIGN AFFAIRS. The SUBSTITUTE MINISTER FOR LABOUR. The MINISTER FOR LOCAL GOVERNMENT. The MINISTER FOR HOME AFFAIRS. The DIRECTOR OF TRADE AND COMMERCE. The DIRECTOR OF FISHERIES. The ASSISTANT MINISTER FOR DEFENCE. The ASSISTANT MINISTER FOR IRISH. THE ASSISTANT MINISTER FOR LOCAL GOVERNMENT.

1922[edit]

we set up a Committee called the Government Contracts Committee, which is placed under the Ministry of Industry and Commerce and there is general approval, so far as the Ministry is concerned, that this particular new service would require the association of another person, either as Assistant Minister or as Minister to be responsible for that particular service. ... I would suggest to the Dáil the appointment of an Assistant Minister in order to give us an opportunity of seeing what the result would be. ... We have now got ... a Second House ... and we have come to the conclusion ... that some liaison between the two Houses would be necessary. I would ask the Dáil, as far as that is concerned, to approve of the appointment of a Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry. ... I think the Dáil, after considering the matter, will come to the conclusion that I put before them now that those two offices ought to be granted—in the first case an Assistant to the Ministry of Industry and Commerce, and in the second case the Cabinet should have the advantage of this Parliamentary Secretary.

1923[edit]

Assistant Minister for Finance

1927[edit]

Michael Heffernan of the Farmers' Party was Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Posts and Telegraphs in the 1927–32 government where all senior ministers were in Cumann na nGaedheal. Technically therefore the Executive Council of the Irish Free State was a Cumann na nGaedhealminority government with confidence and supply support from the Farmers' Party.

1975[edit]

In April 1975, Garret Fitzgerald as Minister for Foreign Affairs asked Liam Cosgrave for a junior minister, and got John M. Kelly, who was already chief whip (and Parliamentary Secretary to the Taoiseach) and so had limited time for the departmental role.[17]

1977[edit]

The Parliamentary Secretaries are, in effect, junior Ministers ... experience has shown that the effective delegation of functions and of the necessary authority for their discharge to Parliamentary Secretaries is impeded by the title of the office. To begin with the domestic level, it is a fact of life that it is difficult to secure full acceptance for their discharge of ministerial functions in a representative or executive capacity by a man who not only lacks the title of Minister but is designated as the Parliamentary Secretary to a Minister. In international affairs, the position is even more difficult. In other countries the office of Parliamentary Secretary is quite a junior position in the Government hierarchy and the term “Minister of State” is commonly recognised as meaning a junior Minister occupying an office immediately below Cabinet rank. The assignment of the title “Minister of State” to junior Ministers therefore offers a means by which a much greater delegation of functions to junior Ministers will be acceptable at home and abroad.

1978[edit]

I wish to say something brief about this motion. Seen formally the motion is merely intended to tidy up a necessary consequence of legislation that was passed here a few months ago in regard to the abolition of the old and honourable title of Parliamentary Secretary its replacement by the title of Minister of State and the creation of another three offices with that same title.

While this Party have no objection to this obviously necessary consequential measure being enacted, I should like to remind the House of what was said by the Tánaiste on 2 November last when he introduced the Second Stage of the Ministers and Secretaries Bill. He gave many reasons for the proposed change, some of which could be taken less seriously [96] than others as, for example, that office holders with the puny title of Parliamentary Secretary were not being taken seriously by foreigners whom they met at meetings in Europe and elsewhere. There were other reasons somewhat more serious than that, with one of which I had to agree, that was, that there was a very high increase in the burden of work which office holders have to endure particularly, as the Minister had just then realised, as a result of the additional functions connected with membership of the European Communities. The Minister explained to the House that these Parliamentary Secretaries, with their new and improved titles and salaries could, because of their greater numbers, not only be helping the Ministers to whom they would be junior but in regard to themselves individually would have what the Minister called “wider and heavier responsibilities than have hitherto been assigned to Parliamentary Secretaries”.

If I have missed a Government announcement in this regard I am sorry for holding up the House, but I do not recall any announcement describing or listing these heavier and extended responsibilities, commensurate with the heavier and extended titles and salaries which these office holders were to be called on to discharge. On the contrary, it seems to me—I make no special point on this since I may not know what is going on inside that Department— that in the case of one of these office holders, and here I beg pardon for appearing ungallant in mentioning this one in particular, Deputy Geoghegan-Quinn, who has been joined by another office holder of the same rank, has diminished responsibilities. I am glad to have the opportunity of wishing Deputy Burke well but I am not sure that Deputy Geoghegan-Quinn's responsibilities are not being diminished instead of extended by this other appointment.

1981–2?[edit]

Emily O'Reilly 2003:[18]

Chatting recently to a cabinet minister about a certain junior minister, I realised that I didn't know what the minister was junior minister of exactly. So I asked the cabinet minister. He didn't have a clue either.
Garret FitzGerald shattered their illusions when he became taoiseach in the early 1980s. Garret, being Garret, ran overtime when dishing out the cabinet positions and, to get back on schedule, called in all the prospective junior ministers together and handed out their portfolios en masse. Some were miffed at this job-lot approach to their big day, others didn't like the portfolios they'd been given. Fine, said Garret, you can swap. So they did.
Still they tootle on, ever hopeful of promotion, drawing to themselves the few bits and scraps of status that their senior minister discards. The car and driver are as vital to a junior minister as their inner organs.

1982[edit]

In June 1982, Fitzgerald appointed a team of shadow ministers to the Fianna Fáil goverment and also junior ministers.[19] Was this a first use of shadow juniors (other than party whip)?

1982–7[edit]

In December 1982 Fitzgerald "was concerned that all Ministers of State should have specific tasks formally delegated to them by their Ministers, something that in the past had often not been the case'. Accordingly I decided in each instance the duties of the junior Minister, and asked that the formal assignment of these functions be made by the member of the Government concerned."[20]

Nuala Fennell formally at Taoiseach's dept was to coordinate women's affairs across departments, but civil servants and some ministers were uncooperative.[21]

At Barretstown conference in summer 1983, govt agreed to replace garda cars for junior ministers with transport allowance, saving £750k and freeing 30–40 guards.[22]

Before 1986 government reshuffle, Fitzgerald decided not to promote juniors because it would entail demoting seniors, and there was "no tradition in Ireland of dropping Ministers from the cabinet".[23] He did demote two juniors, having warned all these in 1982 that such would happen; but in the event one objected; Fitzgerald had to apologise for misleading the Dáil after he announced the change as a resignation rather than a dismissal.[23] IT described reshuffle as most significant since 1939. Hussey presented as demotion; Haughey said "Instead he put her in charge of the Department of Social Welfare which on its own is a meaningless ministry concerned only with the annual allocation of social welfare funds and nothing else in the way of policy input."

1986 reshuffle

originally envisaged changing Gemma Hussey from Minister for Education to "Minister for European Affairs", technically a minister without portfolio to be delegated functions by Peter Barry, the Minister for Foreign Affairs, allowing Barry to focus on implementing the 1985 Anglo-Irish Agreement. Fitzgerald preferred this to the alternatives of, on the one hand, demoting Hussey to junior minister in the Department of Foreign Affairs, or, on the other hand, splitting European Affairs out of Foreign Affairs into a new Department of State. Objections from another minister (Barry Desmond) meant the eventual reshuffle lacked any minister without portfolio.[24]
(actually Dermot Nally, head civil servant, said would have to be a new department, which suggests Garret hadn't thought through the one-department-two-ministers issue? His memoirs don't explicitly state "without portfolio": what about Hussey's or third-party commentators?)
Hussey (1990 p.196) diary entry for 13 Feb 1993 has "Minister for European Affairs ... I was worried at the beginning that it would look like a souped-up Junior Ministry but Garret is adamant that it's a full Ministry, but then he's not me."[25] There's more up to "volte-face" on p.201 but no mention of "without portfolio".
The Irish Times breaking the story suggests Hussey feared being "regarded as the number two in the shared Department of Foreign Affairs".[26]

1992–4[edit]

Tom Kitt given three unrelated briefs: Arts, women's affairs, and European affairs, causing all three areas to feel insulted at not meriting a fulltime post; but Kitt told ohnw many civil servants were assigned to each.[27]

1994–7[edit]

"Super junior" invented in 1994 since DL couldnt have 2 senior ministers as 15 max and FG 8 and Lab 6.[28]

Hugh Coveney demoted from senior to junior.

1997-2002[edit]

In 1997 Fianna Fáil–PD government, the Department of Equality and Law Reform was effectively abolished, its responsibilities transferred to the Department of Justice (renamed Department of Justice, Equality and Law Reform) where Mary Wallace was minister of state for "equality and disabilities".[29]

2008ish[edit]

Garda driver and official Merc was abolished for ministers of state several years before 2011 abolition for [most] ministers.[30]

References[edit]

Sources[edit]

  • Coakley, John; Gallagher, Michael (1999). Politics in the Republic of Ireland (3rd ed.). London: Routledge. p. 254. ISBN 978-0-415-22194-8 – via Internet Archive.
  • Department of the Taoiseach. "History of Government".
  • FitzGerald, Garret (1991). All in a life: Garret FitzGerald, an autobiography. Gill and Macmillan. ISBN 071711600X – via Internet Archive.
  • Mitchell, Paul (2003). "Ireland: From Single-Party to Coalition Rule". In Müller, Wolfgang C.; Strom, Kaare (eds.). Coalition Governments in Western Europe. Oxford University Press. pp. 126–157: 143–4. ISBN 9780198297611. Retrieved 11 November 2015 – via Google Books. (cites FitzGerald 1991 pp 433-4)

Citations[edit]

  1. ^ Gallagher, Michael (1987). "Does Ireland need a new electoral system?" (PDF). Irish Political Studies. 2 (1): 27–48. doi:10.1080/07907188708406435. ISSN 0790-7184. Retrieved 11 November 2015.
  2. ^ Dougherty, Kerry (30 April 1982). "Junior Ministers: The monkeys in the mercedes". Magill. Retrieved 27 September 2021.
  3. ^ Fitzgerald, Garret (28 January 1995). "Workload of the Cabinet is eased with expert assistance". The Irish Times. p. 16. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  4. ^ Coakley and Gallagher 1999 p. zzz
  5. ^ a b Coakley and Gallagher 1999 p. 254
  6. ^ Coakley and Gallagher 1999 pp. 243
  7. ^ Tonra, Ben (2002). "Irish Foreign Policy". In Crotty, William J; Schmitt, David E (eds.). Ireland on the world stage. Longman. p. 30. ISBN 978-0-582-42357-2. OCLC 48073752.
  8. ^ Connaughton, Bernadette (24 May 2017). "Political-administrative relations: The role of political advisers". Administration. 65 (2): 165–182. doi:10.1515/admin-2017-0020. Retrieved 28 September 2021.
  9. ^ "The farce of our dual-role politicians in Europe". Sunday Business Post. 26 Feb 2006.
  10. ^ Dwyer, Ryle (25 February 2006). "Bertie is making a dog's dinner out of the party's herd of sacred cows". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 28 September 2021.
  11. ^ Whelan, Noel (3 February 2007). "Division of Cabinet portfolios is ad hoc and confused". The Irish Times. p. 18. Retrieved 28 September 2021.
  12. ^ "Junior ministers with senior responsibility". Sunday Business Post. 24 June 2007.
  13. ^ "Backroom: Politically inexperienced Reilly is facing his own Angola". Sunday Business Post. 7 October 2012.
  14. ^ O'Malley, Eoin (2012). "The Apex of Government: Cabinet and Taoiseach in Operation". In O'Malley, Eoin; MacCarthaigh, Muiris (eds.). Governing Ireland: From Cabinet Government to Delegated Governance. Dublin: Institute of Public Administration. p. 42. ISBN 978-1-904541-97-4.
  15. ^ "Twentieth Dáil -". History of Government. Department of Taoiseach. Retrieved 13 November 2015.
  16. ^ "Dáil Éireann - 05/Dec/1939 Ministers and Secretaries (Amendment) Bill, 1939.—Second Stage". Retrieved 12 November 2015.
  17. ^ Fitzgerald 1991 p. 191
  18. ^ O'Reilly, Emily (26 January 2003). "Junior ministers are born to go nowhere fast". Sunday Times [Irish edition]. p. 18. Retrieved 28 September 2021.
  19. ^ Fitzgerald 1991 p. 408
  20. ^ Fitzgerald 1991 p. 434
  21. ^ Mitchell 2003; Fitzgerald 1991 p. 435
  22. ^ Fitzgerald 1991 p. 456
  23. ^ a b Fitzgerald 1991 p. 622
  24. ^ Fitzgerald 1991 pp. 624–626
  25. ^ Hussey, Gemma (1990). At the Cutting Edge: Cabinet Diaries, 1982-1987. Gill and Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-7171-1753-6.
  26. ^ "Taoiseach wanted Hussey in new Euro Ministry". The Irish Times. 15 February 1986. p. 1. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  27. ^ Hussey, Gemma (1995). Ireland Today. Harmondsworth: Penguin. pp. 427, 487. ISBN 978-0-14-015761-1.
  28. ^ Mitchell 2003, p.143; Coakley and Gallagher 1999 p. 243
  29. ^ Coakley and Gallagher 1999 p. 315
  30. ^ O'Regan, Michael (3 May 2011). "Ministerial perk of Merc with Garda driver ends". The Irish Times. Retrieved 28 September 2021.