Appointment of a ministerial post dedicated to marine issues is a step closer, following the outcome of the general election.
The three political parties which had made specific election promises about a marine minister have all performed well – Fianna Fáil, Fine Gael and Sinn Féin.
However, it could be the new year before a new government is formed.
If Donegal has any influence, the prospect is very favourable as former marine minister Pat the Cope Gallagher has made a spectacular comeback to take a Dail seat, while outgoing marine minister Charlie McConalogue survived.
Sinn Féin’s Padraig MacLochlainn, who has been a party marine spokesman, was elected on the second count, following his party colleague Pearse Doherty. Independent TD Thomas Pringle, who had been particularly good on marine issues, lost his seat in Donegal.
Gallagher has vast experience at both national and European level, but his priority would be seen as fisheries rather than wider marine issues.
The 75-year-old Fianna Fáil politician was appointed Minister of State at the Department of Marine from March 1987 to July 1988, and during his time as an MEP, he was a member of the European Parliament’s fisheries committee.
After he returned to domestic politics in 2002 and successfully contested that year’s election, he held a junior marine minister post in Taoiseach Bertie Ahern’s 2004 reshuffle, until February 2006.
There was another stint as MEP, when he was again on the fisheries committee, and he lost his European seat in 2014.
He was elected to the new five-seat Donegal constituency in 2016, along with Charlie McConalogue, but lost the seat in 2020 when Sinn Féín’s Padraig MacLochlainn took back the seat Gallagher had won at his expense in 2016.
Now all three men – Gallagher, MacLochlainn, and McConalogue – have been elected in Donegal.
Sinn Féin, which is less likely at time of writing, to be in the mix for forming a new government made the most extensive promises in its manifesto in relation to the marine sector.
The Green Party, which lost all but one of its seats, had promised to designate 50 per cent of Irish territorial waters as marine protected areas.
The Labour Party, which could be in a coalition, had promised a review of Ireland’s fish quotas with a redistribution of high value species such as mackerel to ensure smaller vessels receive a fair share.
The Seafood Ireland Alliance, comprising five Irish seafood organisations, singled out the “strong support” by Sinn Féin for the marine sector in its manifesto for the current general election campaign.
The alliance contacted all the main political parties for copies of their manifestos.
It welcomed Fine Gael’s manifesto support for a dedicated Minister of State for Fisheries and a review of the EU Common Fisheries Policy (CFP).
Fianna Fáil’s promise to appoint a dedicated junior marine minister who would “work closely” with a Cabinet minister was described as “positive” by the alliance.
It noted that Fianna Fáil’s marine section in its manifesto was “not as comprehensive” as that of the other two parties but said it was “encouraging that Fianna Fáil will advocate for CFP reforms that better reflect Ireland’s share of fish species caught in its waters, ensuring fairer quotas”.
Fianna Fáil also promised to explore incentives for boats to land their catch in Irish ports, stimulating the domestic processing sector.

















































