Categories
Featured News Jamaica World News

Leo Varadkar, Ireland First Gay Prime Minister

Ireland (McKoy’s News) –  Ireland First Gay Prime Minister: Leo Varadkar is set to become the Republic of Ireland’s next taoiseach (prime minister) after winning the leadership of the Fine Gael party.

The 38-year-old will become the first gay taoiseach and will also be the country’s youngest ever leader.

Mr. Varadkar beat his rival, Housing Minister Simon Coveney, with 60% of the votes to lead Fine Gael – the biggest party in the coalition government.

He will succeed Enda Kenny as leader of the centre-right party within weeks.

The former GP is the son of an Irish nurse and a doctor from India and much of the media coverage of his victory has focused on Mr Varadkar’s background, age and sexuality.

The former first minister of Northern Ireland, DUP leader Arlene Foster, has spoken on the phone to congratulate Mr. Varadkar. He has also received a letter from Prime Minister Theresa May.

Following the announcement on Friday evening, the new Fine Gael leader said he was “honoured” to accept the “enormous challenge” ahead of him with humility.

“If my election shows anything it’s that prejudice has no hold in this Republic,” he said.

“When my father travelled 5,000 miles to build a new home in Ireland, I doubt he ever dreamed his son would grow up to be its leader.”

He said Simon Coveney had gained his and the party’s admiration for his “principled and spirited” campaign and he looked forward to working with him to bring Fine Gael and Ireland forward.

“Any child growing up in Ireland now, I hope, looks at me and my unlikely story and my background, and everything about me, and perhaps says to themselves, that there is no office in this state that I can’t aspire to, nothing that they can’t do if they believe in themselves,” he said.

“But our job as a party is to make sure that every person in our country actually has those opportunities, because we don’t have equality of opportunity in this country, there is great inequality of opportunity in this country, but as a party I want to dedicate ourselves to building a republic of opportunity.”

Mr. Varadkar also paid tribute to Mr Kenny for passing on a party and country “in a much better place than he found it.

The leadership was decided in an electoral college system that gave 65% of the vote to the Fine Gael parliamentary party – made up of 73 TDs (members of the Irish assembly), senators and MEPs.

The party’s 21,000 rank-and-file members had 25% of the vote, and 235 local representatives had 10%.

Mr. Varadkar, who came out as gay in the run up to the 2015 same-sex marriage referendum, has been in charge of the welfare system.

He has come to personify the liberalisation of a country which was once regarded as one of Europe’s most socially conservative nations – homosexuality was illegal until 1993.

However, Mr Varadkar has come under criticism for his comments on progressive issues and workers’ rights.


Contributed by: Dr. Collin O Jarrett

By Mckoy's News

Mckoy’s News is Jamaica’s Online Newspaper: News website that readers have access to 24/7 without a subscription or newspaper cost. We get you the news you want – from the ground up – and it comes directly to your phone, computer or tablet with just one click.

Leave a Reply