Latest news with #TommyGallagher


Belfast Telegraph
7 days ago
- Politics
- Belfast Telegraph
‘He was a towering figure': Senior SDLP figure Tommy Gallagher dies at 82
Tommy Gallagher (centre) with Margaret Ritchie and Alasdair McDonnell before the funeral of John Hume in 2020. SDLP leader Claire Hanna has led tributes after the death of former MLA and Good Friday Agreement negotiator Tommy Gallagher. Mr Gallagher, described as a 'towering figure' in local politics, passed away aged 82. He was MLA for Fermanagh-South Tyrone from 1998 to 2011 and was also a local councillor. Ms Hanna said: 'Tommy Gallagher was a towering figure in Fermanagh and a constant force for good in his native Belleek. 'He leaves behind a lasting legacy not only in politics, but as a teacher, a GAA player and coach and someone who always worked for the betterment of his local community. 'His loss will be felt far across the political spectrum, such is the esteem he was held in by colleagues from all parties. 'He will also be warmly remembered for the difference he made to the lives of the young people he taught and those he coached and played alongside over many years. 'Tommy got involved in the SDLP and politics at a very difficult time and he was rightly proud of the role he played as part of the SDLP team leading up to the Good Friday Agreement. 'He did his part to deliver peace on this island and build a better future for our young people.' Born on August 17 1942, in Ballyshannon, Co Donegal, Mr Gallagher entered politics in the early 1970s after attending Queen's University and becoming a teacher at St Mary's High School in Brollagh. He joined the SDLP at its formation, spurred on by a wish to improve his local community. Tommy Gallagher (centre) with Margaret Ritchie and Alasdair McDonnell before the funeral of John Hume in 2020. The Open at Royal Portrush: What happened in 2019 He was elected to Fermanagh District Council in 1989, and would prioritise local development, infrastructure issues, electrification of rural roads and improvements to local roads. In April 1998, Mr Gallagher played a crucial role as a SDLP negotiator during the peace talks which led to the signing of the Good Friday Agreement. In June that year, he was elected to the newly formed Assembly, representing Fermanagh-South Tyrone in 1998, before his retirement in 2011. He was also the party spokesperson for education and health. After his retirement from the Assembly, he would remain an active member of his community. In 2018, Mr Gallagher sustained serious injuries in a car crash. He suffered bone damage, and his ribcage was badly affected, and was airlifted to the Royal Victoria Hospital in Belfast, where he required extensive treatment during three weeks in hospital.


BBC News
7 days ago
- Politics
- BBC News
Tommy Gallagher: SDLP politician dies at the age of 82
Tributes have been paid to the former SDLP assembly member Tommy Gallagher who has died at the age of 82.A prominent figure in the early years of the Northern Ireland Assembly, Mr Gallagher, played a significant role as part of the SDLP's negotiating team in the lead-up to the Good Friday Agreement in 1998.A teacher for almost 30 years at St Mary's High School, Brollagh, near Enniskillen, he entered politics in the early 1970s, becoming a founding member of the was first elected as a councillor in 1989 and went on to represent Fermanagh and South Tyrone in the Northern Ireland Assembly between 1998 until his retirement in 2011. 'A constant force for good' The SDLP leader and MP for South Belfast, Claire Hanna, described him as "a towering figure" in Fermanagh and "a constant force for good" in his native Belleek."He leaves behind a lasting legacy not only in politics, but as a teacher, a GAA player and coach and someone who always worked for the betterment of his local community," Hanna said."His loss will be felt far across the political spectrum, such is the esteem he was held in by colleagues from all parties." She said the SDLP stalwart would be warmly remembered for the difference he made to the lives of the young people he taught and those he coached and played alongside over many years."Tommy got involved in the SDLP and politics at a very difficult time and he was rightly proud of the role he played as part of the SDLP team leading up to the Good Friday Agreement. "He did his part to deliver peace on this island and build a better future for our young people."


The Sun
28-06-2025
- Entertainment
- The Sun
The night I tried to reunite Liam & Noel with their estranged dad & why it's still one of my biggest regrets 29 years on
SOME might say I have zero chance of ever being granted forgiveness by Liam and Noel Gallagher. I don't deserve it but, for a very long time, I've wanted to tell them: 'I'm sorry.' 7 7 Looking back, I now completely understand why Liam was furious. He was so angry that he tried to punch me in the face. But at the time, I really didn't know the truth about what I'd been dragged into. The summer of 2025 will be the summer of Oasis — the comeback fans have patiently waited years for. But their reunion is a stark reminder of a particularly dark night in my past. The night I accompanied their father, Tommy Gallagher, to the Westbury Hotel in Dublin on Saturday, March 23, 1996. I was a junior reporter based in Yorkshire who, weeks earlier, after just turning 21, was asked to go to Tommy's home in Manchester to see if he'd talk about his world-famous sons. I was polite, he was friendly. We built up a rapport. He told me he hadn't seen his three sons since the day his wife left him. Lonely Tommy often said how much he adored and missed them and was desperate to be back in their lives. I felt sorry for him. He would get emotional showing me family photos and the guitar he said he had taught them their first chords on. When I relayed this to bosses in London, they told me I had to play a Cilla Black Surprise Surprise-type role — bringing the family back together. So, the plan was to accompany Tommy to Ireland, and to stay at the same fancy hotel the band were at while performing in the city. I was told to stay at Tommy's house the night before the trip to guarantee he made the early-morning flight. I knew better than to argue, so spent the night where Noel used to sleep. I say 'spent' — not 'slept' — because, believe me, you don't do much sleeping when in a house with a much older man you barely know. I was naive, young and inexperienced. It was my first ever solo job for the paper. 7 I was eager to impress my bosses in the tough newsroom down south. After checking into the hotel, Tommy wrote a letter explaining why he was there, which was handed to Liam. Minutes later, Liam rang Tommy's hotel room and barked at him: 'If I catch you round . . . walking round the lobby in this hotel . . . you're going to get your legs f***ing broke. Right? See ya later.' Reign of terror Tommy appeared devastated and said his heart was 'broken'. But Liam hadn't minced his words — and there would be no tear-jerker Cilla reunion role for me. We were told to head home in the morning, and the photographer who was on standby for the reunion snaps was told to leave. It was done. But Tommy wouldn't listen. At 2am, my hotel room phone rang. Tommy shouted: 'If you want a decent story, you'd better get down to the bar, NOW.' I begged him to calm down, to go to bed, to stop being ridiculous. He wouldn't listen. I was bleary-eyed but will never, ever forget the extraordinary scenario I raced into. There was Tommy, sitting in one corner of the bar, staring forcefully at the band who were at the other side. He refused to leave. In an instant, all hell broke loose. Liam swaggered over, bouncing up and down, and screamed: 'I told you I'd break your legs.' He lunged for his dad first, and then tried to punch me. Bouncers held him back, but Liam snarled: 'I'll break that tart's f***ing legs, too.'' Noel watched on, ready to wade in. Liam told his dad he was a 'loser', while he was a 'millionaire' who 'can afford bail now'. Tommy made jibes about Liam's then partner, Patsy Kensit, and called Liam a 'silly boy'. I sat there trembling. Finally, Tommy stormed off and one of the huge but kindly Oasis security guards 'escorted' me and my luggage out of the hotel, as I fought back tears. Liam and Noel have since, rightly, spoken out about how appalling this incident was. What they knew at the time, and I didn't, is that Tommy was a shocking, vile, evil father. And a liar. Just six months after that night, their mum Peggy set the record straight, revealing she had fled from Tommy because he was a womaniser and a drunk who beat her, Noel and their eldest son Paul. She said they were all left scarred by his reign of terror. When I read her words, I felt physically sick. That terrifying night now fully made sense to mje. I had been fed a pack of lies. And used. I have felt remorse for my part in what happened ever since. And if Noel and Liam still look back in anger at that night, I really don't blame them. I do, too. And I'm sorry. Don't hound Royals 7 THE charity folk at Peta – People For The Ethical Treatment Of Animals – have slammed William and Kate for allowing their cocker spaniel, Orla, to have puppies instead of adopting one amid an 'animal homelessness crisis'. They even said the royals were 'staggeringly out of touch' for 'churning out a litter'. How ridiculous – and nasty. They went on to openly praise Charles and Camilla, who have 'chosen to adopt from a shelter rather than contribute to the problem'. Adopting a dog doesn't suit every family. Sometimes a family really needs the focus and joy of seeing new life come into this world. Like, for example, when three young children have seen their mum go through an agonising cancer battle. One of the pups is staying with them, the rest will be guaranteed good homes. You wouldn't find a children's charity chastising people who have a bouncing baby instead of adopting, would you? Even though there are thousands of desperate kids in this country who need homes. Surely Peta must realise Kate and William actually do more for charities in this country than most. And I hope that they stop for a moment to think about how 'stag-geringly out of touch' they are for thinking it acceptable to attack a family in this way. Brazen Bezos 7 BILLIONAIRE Jeff Bezos either has very thick skin or zero self-awareness. On Thursday, as protests around his lavish wedding to Lauren Sanchez hit fever pitch, he gushed to anybody that listened: 'We love Venice.' Clearly not grasping the fact that Venice really doesn't love him. Kim's classy collab 7 KIM KARDASHIAN shows off a new bikini for her collection – a collab between her Skims brand and Roberto Cavalli. She said the lucrative partnership came about because she looked through old holiday photos and saw she was wearing Cavalli, which prompted her to contact the brand's creative director. Which, to the rest of us, is like contacting the boss at M&S, Primark or Next. But getting absolutely zero response. Crumby queues 7 FANCY trying that M&S strawberry-and-cream sarnie? Yes, me too. They couldn't have pushed it or hyped it up any more than they have, could they? I burst into my local Marksy's with full enthusiasm on Friday to be told that they only receive 'a few' packets each morning and are 'selling out by lunchtime'. That will be that, then, because there is zero chance-I'm joining an early-morning Wimbledon-type queue for a sandwich, however wonderful it sounds.