
22 October-November 2025
Institutions “create a narrative”: Connolly and Pat Leahy disagreed about the
place of economics on Vincent Browne’s ‘Tonight Show’
She emphasised that in Galway, voters were
looking for change. She worked hard on the
ground, moving wards, taking risks that
worried the party, and ultimately helping
Labour become the largest group on the
Council. I ask her if Labour were not radical
enough and she does one of her pauses,
saying endearingly it’s the Presidential
election and she doesn’t want to… “we should
have led!”.
Nationalism and Sinn Féin
I asked whether she thought Sinn Féin was too
nationalist, not nationalist enough, or about
right. Connolly welcomed the support Sinn
Féin had oered her, but was clear too about
her own ground as a “United Irelander”. “I am
a committed advocate of a United Ireland.
That comes from vivid memory: refugees from
the North came down to Galway, stayed in St
Mary’s College. I’ve gone North many times,
often quietly”. And when asked she said she
would love it if it happened “during my one
term” but it’s “a political thing”.
Religious oaths and spirituality
She would have no problem with the oath
before God that the President is obliged to take
but was she religious in general? She didn’t
know what the word means. Connolly described
her Catholic upbringing. “My father was a
committed Catholic though we parted ways. Is
there something bigger than me? I absolutely
hope so. I hope there’s a spirituality”.
The Presidency and neutrality
Her greatest enthusiasm as President would
be recognising the role of communities on the
ground.
Asked how she would conduct the
Presidency, Connolly emphasised
independence. “It is a separate institution.
I’ve read the relevant Constitutional articles.
I’ve worked in many capacities, listened to
people with views opposite to mine, and done
so professionally. As Leas Ceann Comhairle I
listened to opinions that were the polar
opposite of mine. That is democracy. I am a
democrat to my fingertips”.
And what if she was asked to sign a bill that
compromised neutrality? “That
misunderstands the role”. Her role is to refer
it, if she thinks it may be unconstitutional, to
the Supreme Court and otherwise sign it into
law, when any other citizen can challenge it.
“If I had doubts, I would refer it to the
Supreme Court. That is the duty. I would look
carefully at each bill”.
She does, however, describe herself as a
pacifist. I asked her if she thought Ireland, if
it had the opportunity, should supply arms to
Palestinians. She bridled: “no”. And what
about Irish neutrality in World War II? She
supported it. And opposition to Nazi
Germany? — and should Britain have been
neutral in that War? She is firm. “I’ve always
tried to avoid trite answers, the Twitter
approach: these are complicated issues that
need time to answer”.
I tried something simpler: would she be
warm to Trump? She hoped she’d be warm to
everyone.
A voice for peace, neutrality and life-
long learning
What would she like her legacy to be? “I’d like
to be inclusive, empowering people to use
their voices. Peace. We need a voice for peace,
a voice for neutrality. Neutrality is absolutely
necessary. I’d like my legacy to be one of
encouraging lifelong learning. My father and
mother instilled that in me: the more you
know and the more you listen, the more you
realise how much there is to learn”.
Climate change and sustainability
Connolly spoke passionately about climate
change and rural sustainability. She went out
of her way to praise community projects,
especially the Connemara Forum.
Development patterns
On housing and balanced regional
development, she was frank. “We have a
serious housing crisis in Galway, no
infrastructure. Raw sewage still pours into the
sea at Ceathra Rua. Failure to promote
balanced regional development is a disaster.
The Gaeltacht cannot survive without houses.
There is no housing in the seven Gaeltachts.
Yet the narrative blames so-called ‘serial
objectors’. I find that language appalling.
People go to great trouble to raise concerns,
and we label them as obstacles. That’s
corrosive for democracy (and sustainability)”.
She could see that once-o housing poses
issues for the environment but said there
aren’t that many planning permissions given
for it now.
She noted that Ireland has hundreds of
vacancies for planners, there are 600
vacancies. “We pass laws, but we don’t
enforce them. We underfund planning, and
then we blame citizens, We need a robust
planning system and we had problems with
the former Bord Pleanála”. She regretted
the recent planning bill has clamped down
on resident rights.
The Irish language
Connolly’s passion for Irish was clear. “I was
ashamed of not having it. I decided to become
fluent, did a translation course. Irish gives a
completely dierent perspective. English is a
language of domination; Irish sees no
distinction between people and nature. I want
to normalise Irish, to empower people to use
it”. She says she is dierent in Irish, softer.
Cultural hinterland
I invited Connolly to speak about her Life
Beyond Politics and she smiled at the
chance. “Oh dear. Books. I have seven on
the go but in the end I do finish them. I’ve
read a lot on Palestine. I love historical
novels — Robert Harris’s trilogy on Cicero,
for example, and how relevant it is to today
– with the slaughter. I love Seamus Heaney,
especially ‘Republic of Conscience’. Yeats,
Emily Dickinson”. Her dad wrote poetry.
Her cultural tastes are broad and far from
only political. She plays piano, now pursuing
formal grades, and hopes to play competently
one day. She loves both classical and
traditional music. Though she has beem
misrepresented as comparing current
Germany to its “Nazi” predecessor, she
studied German, lived and worked in
Germany, and still aspires to fluency though
she wouldn’t trust herself with her
pronunciation.
She hadn’t been to the cinema much
recently though she loves movies.
“We did a lot of sport”, she added. She has
run too many marathons to recall. Her best
time is three hours thirty-six. And triathlons,
often with siblings, in the 1980s.
Values
When asked what she was proudest of, she
answered without hesitation: “Coming from
a family of fourteen. The values my dad gave
us. My family shaped me”.
President Connolly
Asked directly if she expected to win, Connolly
said emphatically: yes.