Luke Duffy

For the rugby league footballer, see Luke Duffy (rugby league).

Luke Joseph Duffy (1890 – 3 August 1961) was an Irish trades unionist and Labour Party politician, who served for five years as a Senator.

Born in Gurteen, County Sligo in 1890, Duffy's first job was as a draper's apprentice in Moon's of Galway. By 1910, he was an active member of the local branch of the Irish Drapers' Assistants Association (IDAA), and he was elected branch secretary in 1911. In the following years, he was vice-president and trustee of the Trades Council, secretary of the Volunteers and of the Galway City Gaelic Athletic Association, and active in the Irish National Foresters. In 1914, he chaired the IDAA's annual conference in Dublin. Sacked from Moon's for union activity in 1916, he was appointed Munster organiser of the IDAA. A few years later, he was elected as general secretary of the renamed Irish Union of Distributive Workers and Clerks. In 1933, he became general secretary of the Irish Labour Party.

In 1944, he was elected by the Industrial and Commercial Panel as a member of the 5th Seanad. He was re-elected in 1948 to the 6th Seanad, but resigned when appointed to the board of the newly established Industrial Development Authority for Industry and Commerce (IDAIC), by Dan Morrisey, Minister for Industry and Commerce. This appointment was for a term of five years through 25 May 1954. He resigned from the Senate to accept this appointment and also relinquished his position as General Secretary of the Labour Party.

In his appointment to the IDAIC Duffy worked at developing strategies that would ultimately lead to attracting direct foreign investment into Ireland. The IDAIC was placed on statutory footing in 1950. Luke spent the rest of his career in advancing the aims and objectives of the IDAIC.

Duffy died on 3 August 1961, in Dún Laoghaire, a suburb of Dublin, at 71 years of age.

Sources

Trade union offices
Preceded by
John G. Gilloway
General Secretary of the Irish Union of Distributive Workers and Clerks
1922–1933
Succeeded by
Michael Drumgoole
Preceded by
Cathal O'Shannon
President of the Irish Trade Union Congress
1923–1924
Succeeded by
William X. O'Brien
Preceded by
William McMullen
President of the Irish Trade Union Congress
1929
Succeeded by
Thomas J. O'Connell
Preceded by
Denis Cullen
Treasurer of the Irish Trade Union Congress
1931–1933
Succeeded by
Seán Campbell


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