Catherine Connolly launches presidential bid saying she wants ‘empower people to find their own voices'
Catherine Connolly
has launched her bid to become president, saying 'we're at a critical state in our country' and she is standing to 'empower people to find their own voices'.
The Galway West TD made the announcement outside Leinster House on Wednesday, flanked by politicians from the
Social Democrats
and
People Before Profit
as well as independents who are set to nominate her to appear on the ballot paper.
During a press conference she spoke about her vision for the presidency and also defended her record including a trip she took to
Syria
during dictator
Bashar al-Assad's
time in power
Announcing her election bid, she said: 'I do so with the deep conviction that together, we can make this country better, and that we can make this country live up to its name, the Republic, and show that there is a different way.'
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She said: 'We're at a critical state in our country', and added she was standing 'to enable people, to empower people to find their own voices, to stand up and be counted, to say there is a different way.'
Ms Connolly said: 'We must deal with climate change. We must be a voice for peace. We have to stop the normalisation of war and violence. We have to stop the normalisation of homelessness. We have to say that these problems are not inevitable.'
She added: 'They are man-made, policy driven, and we can have a different type of country and a different type of world.
'That is what motivates me'.
Since it emerged last week that she would be throwing her hat in the ring, a trip she took to Syria in 2018 along with then-TDs
Clare Daly
,
Mick Wallace
and Maureen O'Sullivan has resurfaced.
At the time, al-Assad was still in office and engaged in a brutal civil war.
Asked about the visit, she said she funded the trip herself, its purpose was 'fact-finding' with fellow TDs and activists and she 'met no member of government'.
She said she visited a refugee camp outside Damascus and 'saw firsthand the destruction of a whole city', adding: 'I mean, my idea, up to then, of a refugee camp wasn't up to scratch really.'
Ms Connolly said they were shown around by Palestinians and 'we stayed with them all of the time'.
They travelled to Aleppo and met the Chamber of Commerce and also had a meeting with
Unicef
as well as visiting a convent.
Catherine Connolly launching her presidential bid outside the Dáil on Wednesday. Photograph: Alan Betson
Catherine Connolly answering questions from members of the media outside the Dáil on Wednesday. Photograph: Alan Betson
Catherine Connolly with supporters as she launches her presidential bid outside the Dáil on Wednesday. Photograph: Alan Betson
'On no occasion had I anything to do with the government, nor did I ever utter one word of support for Assad,' she said.
Asked about a perception that she has a combative political style, Ms Connolly said she disputed that and said she would 'rephrase' it, adding: 'I think I've been very straight, honest and direct. I think I'm a very hard worker.'
'If as a society we don't value hard work and straight and blunt talking without any spin, then we're in trouble.
'I don't think I've set out to stir things or to be that type of politician.'
She pointed to her time as Leas Cheann Comhairle in the last Dáil, saying: 'I've shown that I've been fair, that I'm able to put aside my strong opinion and function as a Leas Cheann Comhairle.'
She said: 'I'm a democrat to my fingertips.'
Earlier, she told RTÉ Raidió na Gaeltachta's Adhmhaidin programme that she did not make the decision to contest the election overnight and was doubtful enough about the move, but was convinced by correspondence she got from people asking her to run.
'I was taken aback by the support I received, I wasn't expecting that level of support from people across the country, in English and Irish,' she said speaking in Irish.
On Tuesday, Fine Gael's
Mairead McGuinness
became the first official nominee in the presidential race to replace
Michael D Higgins
after his term comes to an end in the autumn.
Ms McGuinness, who was a TV presenter and farming journalist before becoming an MEP and EU commissioner, is the nominee to become Fine Gael's presidential candidate.
[
Profile: The outspoken left-wing campaigner running for president
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]
The election to succeed Mr Higgins is set to take place in late October or early November.
Prospective candidates need the support of 20 Oireachtas members to get on the ballot paper.
Fianna Fáil has not clarified if it will run a candidate and is to make a decision in the early autumn.
Sinn Féin
leader
Mary Lou McDonald
has also refused to rule herself out of the running.
Ms Connolly has received the backing of the Social Democrats and People Before Profit, with the Labour Party to 'very seriously' consider backing her.
Ms Connolly worked as a barrister and a clinical psychologist before becoming a councillor for 17 years and spending a term as Galway mayor until 2005.
She resigned from the Labour Party in 2006 after being turned down to be a running mate of then incumbent TD Michael D Higgins.
She was first elected to the Dáil as an independent candidate for Galway West in 2016.
Speaking on Wednesday, she said she did not 'fall out' with the Labour Party and said she understood that Labour and Sinn Féin were considering support her, adding she already had the support of more than 20 Oireachtas members. - additional reporting PA
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