Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald makes frontbench reshuffle

A number of senior TDs will remain in their existing portfolios

Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald presented the Sinn Féin frontbench team for the 34th Dáil. Photograph: Nick Bradshaw / The Irish Times
Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald presented the Sinn Féin frontbench team for the 34th Dáil. Photograph: Nick Bradshaw / The Irish Times

Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald has announced a minor reshuffle of her frontbench, with two first-time TDs promoted.

Louth TD Joanna Byrne has been appointed as the party’s spokeswoman for arts, media and culture while Clare TD Donna McGettigan has been appointed as spokeswoman for further and higher education.

A number of senior TDs will remain in their existing portfolios including Donegal TD Pearse Doherty as spokesman for finance, Waterford TD David Cullinane as health spokesman and Dublin Mid West TD Eoin Ó Broin as spokesman for housing. Cavan Monaghan TD Matt Carthy will become the party’s justice spokesman, while Kerry TD Pa Daly will move to cover climate, environment and energy.

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Speaking on Tuesday morning, Ms McDonald said she was making a “simple pledge” to the “working people of Ireland” that her party “will be up and at it from day one, working for you, non stop.”

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“We’ll hold this Government to account at every turn, call out every bad policy, every dodgy decision, every failure, and we will push for the major change of direction that is so badly needed in so many areas, in housing, in health, in childcare and in the response to the cost of living. There will be no let up.”

She said “it’s not simply our job to set out a theoretical platform, theoretical alternatives, although we will come with alternatives and plans, but we also need to take this Government on.”

Mary Lou McDonald photographed with the Sinn Féin front bench team. Photograph: Nick Bradshaw / The Irish Times
Mary Lou McDonald photographed with the Sinn Féin front bench team. Photograph: Nick Bradshaw / The Irish Times

Separately, the Sinn Féin leader said her party would not be backing down in the ongoing row over speaking rights, with Regional Independent convener Michael Lowry - who helped strike a government formation deal - also insisting he is entitled to Opposition privileges.

“There are no circumstances in which Michael Lowry should be allowed, or can be allowed, to pretend that he is a member of the Opposition.”

She said what is happening is “an insult to the collective intelligence of the Irish electorate.”

“We have a job to do as the Opposition and we will not allow Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael to encroach on the Opposition, to blur the lines, to create confusion, and to pretend that one of their own TDs would be the one to hold them to account. That clearly cannot stand in any circumstances.”

Ms McDonald was also quizzed on her St Patrick’s Day plans and whether she would be travelling to the White House as would normally happen. She stopped short of saying this would be the case.

“We haven’t, obviously, received any invitations. There’s been a bit of speculation as to what’s going to unfold in the States. Generally, we go. We will see how things unfold. We are conscious of what’s happening in the Middle East.”

Sinn Féin has separately confirmed that a promised review of internal structures is near finalisation, with a memo circulated at a meeting of the Ard Comhairle last weekend.

The review was promised after two former party employees provided references for their ex-colleague Michael McMonagle, a former party press officer who has been convicted of child sex offences.

Ms McDonald said a key finding has been there can be “no ambiguity” around HR processes in future.

McMonagle was suspended from his job with Sinn Féin after he was arrested in August 2021, and in September 2022 was appointed to the role of communications and engagement manager with the British Heart Foundation (BHF) in Belfast. It emerged last year that the BHF told a senior Sinn Féin official, who worked in HR, about the references in 2023. The party maintained it only became aware of the references issue late last year.

The full list of Sinn Féin frontbenchers:

President: Mary Lou McDonald

Finance: Pearse Doherty

Public Expenditure, Infrastructure, Public Service Reform and Digitalisation: Mairéad Farrell

Foreign Affairs, Trade and Defence: Donnchadh Ó Laoghaire

Climate, Environment, Energy and Transport: Pa Daly

Education and Youth: Darren O’Rourke

Children, Disability and Equality: Claire Kerrane

Enterprise, Tourism and Employment: Rose Conway-Walsh

Social Protection, Rural and Community Development: Louise O’Reilly

Arts, Media, Communications, Culture and Sport: Joanna Byrne

Health: David Cullinane

Housing, Local Government and Heritage: Eoin Ó Broin

Justice, Homes Affairs and Migration: Matt Carthy

Agriculture, Food, Fisheries, and the Marine: Martin Kenny

Further and Higher Education,Research, Innovation and Science: Donna McGettigan

Gaeilge and Gaeltacht: Aengus Ó Snodaigh

Chief Whip: Pádraig Mac Lochlainn

Jennifer Bray

Jennifer Bray

Jennifer Bray is a Political Correspondent with The Irish Times