Patricia McKenna

Patricia McKenna
Member of the European Parliament
In office
June 1994  June 2004
Constituency Dublin
Personal details
Born (1957-03-13) 13 March 1957
Castleshane, County Monaghan
Nationality Irish
Political party Independent,
Green Party (until May 2009)
Website Official website

Patricia McKenna (born 13 March 1957) is an Irish independent politician. She served as a Green Party Member of the European Parliament (MEP) for the Dublin constituency from 1994 to 2004.

Background

A native of Castleshane, a small village in County Monaghan, McKenna was formerly a member of the Green Party.[1] She became the first Green Party candidate in Ireland to be elected to the European Parliament. She was elected to the European Parliament at the 1994 election and was re-elected at the 1999 election but lost her seat at the 2004 election. She acted as one of the Dáil advisers to Ireland's first Green Party Teachta Dála (TD), Roger Garland. In 1997 she called for a boycott of Dunnes Stores when it was reported to be selling clothes produced in a state-run factory in Burma.[2]

A former teacher, she is active in People's Movement which successfully campaigned for the rejection of the Treaty of Lisbon in 2008.

McKenna has been involved in many campaigns as an MEP and politician. She is perhaps best known for her victory in the Supreme Court in 1995, in which she argued successfully that it was unconstitutional for the Government of Ireland to spend taxpayers money promoting only one side of the argument in referendum campaigns. This led to the setting up of the Referendum Commission.

She is also well known for her opposition to nuclear power, genetically modified food, and United States-led military action in various parts of the world.

McKenna also campaigned against the Irish government's plan to join NATO's "Partnership for Peace". She is a strong advocate of Irish neutrality and the Shell to Sea campaign, and was widely associated with the Eurosceptic wing of the Green Party.

McKenna ran as Green Party candidate at the 2007 general election for the Dublin Central constituency, but was not elected. She also strongly opposed the 2007 Programme for Government between the Green Party and Fianna Fáil. After the election, she declared herself a candidate for the leadership of the Green Party, but the position was won by John Gormley. She was elected to the Green Party National Executive in April 2008.[3] In July 2008 she was not selected as the Green candidate for the 2009 local elections in the Cabra/Glasnevin area of the Dublin Central constituency.

In August 2008 she appeared in RTÉ's reality show Fáilte Towers. She was the fifth contestant evicted from the show.

In 2014, she graduated with a degree in Law and Political Science from Trinity College, Dublin.

2009 European Parliament election

In May 2009, McKenna announced her intention to run as an independent candidate at the 2009 European Parliament election in Dublin - attacking her party colleagues as "nothing but hypocrites" due to their role in the coalition government, and that she would be "embarrassed to stand as their candidate".[4]

Reactions by former party colleagues to McKenna's departure from the Green Party were mixed. According to Green Party senator Déirdre de Búrca, "The pity about Patricia McKenna's move is that she did not do it at least a year ago and spare herself and her party colleagues a lot of time-wasting and strife. It has been increasingly clear that she does not share the same views on many issues with Green Party members."[5]

McKenna was not elected at the 2009 European Parliament election. She received 17,521 first preference votes (4.3%). She was eliminated at the fifth count, after her former party colleague Déirdre de Búrca, who was eliminated at the third count.

In June 2010, she attended meetings with a number of former Green Party members to facilitate the formation of a new political party, Fís Nua.[6]

2016 campaigning

In 2016, McKenna campaigned for the United Kingdom to leave the European Union in the run up to its membership referendum. She argued that the EU is unreformable and criticised its neoliberal policies.[7]

References

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