
SCANDALS, punch-ups, shenanigans, bitter inter-dynastic contests and the stories of the ground-breaking politicians from Kerry, who made their mark on the national stage and beyond, feature in a new book from local authors Owen O’Shea and Gordon Revington, which will be launched at Tralee Library on Thursday.
Since the establishment of Dáil Éireann 100 years ago, Kerry’s political history has taken many lively, colourful and compelling turns, largely thanks to its wide roster of fascinating politicians, from Austin Stack to Kathleen O’Connor and John Marcus O’Sullivan to Dick Spring.
Drawing on original research, newly published material from the political parties’ archives and candid interviews, A Century of Politics in the Kingdom is published to coincide with the centenary of the first Dáil.
O’Shea and Revington, both experienced journalists and authors, contend with the dramatic and entertaining episodes and with equal depth they outline the controversies and seminal debates as well as the vociferous character of Kerry’s TDs, senators and political hopefuls over the past century.

Kerry politicians have been at the heart of matters nationally, both symbolic and significant. Even if, as is continually attested, they have had to shout a little louder than many of their counterparts to have their priorities heard, they have indelibly influenced the course of Irish politics and left a lasting legacy in their home county.
The book features some remarkable tales, like the councillor who was unseated for plying voters with drink, the Kerry woman who became a politician in Pakistan, the aristocrat who was invited to Buckingham Palace as a child and went on to become the first woman elected to Kerry County Council, the Kerry senator who received an apology from the BBC, the story of all of Kerry’s female politicians, the councillor who took his own council to court, the night the gardaí were called to a meeting of a Fianna Fáil cumann in north Kerry and the Dáil by-election candidate deselected because he wasn’t popular enough, all feature.
Featuring the first ever definitive record of every Kerry Oireachtas member since 1919, A Century of Politics in the Kingdom captures the excitement and tension, the rivalries and resentments, the key debates and discussions, and the good old-fashioned fun and games that have characterised the political cauldron in the county over the last century.
The new book will be launched by former Tánaiste, Dick Spring at Tralee Library on Thursday at 7.00pm. It will be available from the middle of this week in all good bookshops, online and from www.merrionpress.ie, as well as the launch on Thursday (RRP €19.99).
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