
May 2015 29
across the country. In September he
made a strong statement to the deregu-
lated waste industry that the “race to
the bottom” in service provision was not
acceptable, but the range of action pro-
posed is awaited.
With construction activity now
increasing the failure to regulate unau-
thorised quarrying is registering again,
despite the elaborate retrospective
“Substitute Consent” process that has
taken place over the last few years to
regulate the industry. The M Gort-
Tuam motorway, for example, is being
built with unauthorised material.
The same placation of vested inter-
ests manifests in Kelly’s response to
unregulated peat extraction, which is
having multiple climate, nature conser-
vation and water quality impact. Rather
than integration with the planning
system combined with robust enforce-
ment, Kelly is proposing total planning
exemption for domestic cutters and
light touch licensing for large-scale hor-
ticultural compost extractors. This will
inevitably generate years of EU com-
plaints and legal actions, though these
always result in political settlements as
the EU has finally revealed its hand as a
deal-making, if grandiose, bluffer.
With the need to hold ground against
back-yard gombeen Michael Lowry the
poll leader in Kelly’s benighted constit-
uency, the Minister’s online blog is
nearly all about North Tipperary led by
announcements of routine funding allo-
cations from other Government
Departments, as well as his own. A
recent one noted: “I am delighted to
announce that a Tipperary company is
among the preferred bidders to deliver
the Government’s Jobpath programme”.
The Minister did not have time to
record whether he was concerned that
the measure, instigated by his party
leader, Joan Burton, is part of a privati-
sation of social security provision.
It might be expected that Kelly’s suc-
cession to the fief of Phil Hogan would
have seen a renewed emphasis on
Labour policy in the Custom House,
particularly on climate and energy. For-
gotten entirely is Labour’s policy
‘The Energy Revolution’ to address
“overreliance on fossil fuels and our
capacity to meet international climate
change targets”. The policy included “a
major national retrofit scheme”, to
reduce domestic heating demand and
emissions. There is now major Euro-
pean Investment Bank (EIB) funding for
this but action is being stymied by the
DoECLG through which EIB applica-
tions must be channeled.
The SIPO report on political
donations showed that Labour’s Alan
Kelly was the biggest receiver of per-
sonal/corporate donations in the
Oireachtas at circa €,. Among
those those donations were from the
same address – €, each from
Nessa and Michael Madden, a childhood
friend, and a donation of €, from RONOC International,
€, of which was subsequently returned. A net donation
of €,. Michael Madden is the MD of RONOC Interna-
tional. RONOC and its associated companies are involved in
financial services such as money transfer.
Strangely, Madden was a speaker at a conference in
at the ‘Naval and Military Club, St James Sq., London’ organ-
ised by The Defence and Security Forum about the financial
global trade and money transfer.
The Defence and Security Forum was founded by Lady Olga
Maitland in . It was originally a campaigning organisa-
tion known as Families for Defence launched to challenge the
anti-nuclear protest movements such as CND. Families for
Defence’s remit was to promote the NATO case for multilat-
eral nuclear disarmament and for defence expenditure in
Britain.
The links are very odd for an alleged ‘Socialist’ Labour
Party then Senator and aspiring MEP. Declan Ganley has been
berated in the media for not a lot more. •
KELLY’S interesting brother, Declan, served as
an advisor to Hillary Clinton’s presidential
election bid in 2008 and was appointed in
2009 as economic envoy to Northern Ireland by
then US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. He
had sold his Dublin-based company Gallagher
and Kelly Public Relations, which he co-owned
with Jackie Gallagher, one time special advisor
to Taoiseach Bertie Ahern, to Financial
Dynamics, one of the world’s leading financial
communications companies, and a subsidiary of
Britain’s Cordiant and then led the buy-out of
that company for $340m – the largest price
ever paid for a communications consulting
company, becoming executive vice president of
FTI Consulting, a 3,500-person business with a
market capitalisation of over $2bn.
An award-winning business journalist who
started with the
Nenagh Guardian
and went on
to the
Examiner
, he was once described as one
of the top communications experts in the world.
Business and Finance
says that he has been
described as this generation’s Tony O’Reilly,
and Irish Central reported that: “Several
successive Taoisigh in Ireland have
acknowledged reaching out to him for advice
over the years. He is an adjunct professor in
business studies at his alma mater, National
University of Ireland, Galway”.
Unfortunately, he was implicated by the
New
York Times
in a 2013 article titled ‘Unease at
Clinton Foundation over Finances and
Ambitions’ which flagged concerns that some
Clinton insiders had about the activities of
Declan Kelly and Doug Band, described by some
as a kind of surrogate son and “gate-keeper” to
Bill Clinton, and one of the forces behind the
Clinton Global Initiative, a series of
collaborations with corporations and
individuals to “solve problems”. Their company,
of which Kelly is CEO, is called Teneo. Its idea
was to have Fortune 400 companies pay large
monthly stipends in exchange for access to
Band, Clinton, and their massive international
network. It poached executives from Wall
Street, recruited other Clinton aides and even
Tony Blair to join as employees or advisers and
set up shop in midtown Manhattan merging
corporate consulting, public relations and
merchant banking to a single business. The firm
recruited clients who were Clinton Foundation
donors, while Band and Kelly encouraged
others to become new foundation donors.
An article in the
New Republic
by Alec
MacGillis said Band, who apparently is
nicknamed “butt boy”, was more responsible
than anyone, except Clinton, for creating a
culture of “transactionalism” in Clinton-land.
On one occasion Declan Kelly kept Presidents
Clinton and Bush waiting while he delivered an
oration to Teneo to consternation. On another,
Clinton exploded in anger after Kelly suggested
to the Global Irish Economic Forum in Dublin
that Teneo had brought the former President
there. Concerns about Teneo gained special
significance as part of a critical internal review
of the Clinton Foundation led by the law firm
Simpson Thacher & Bartlett.
Worse still, in April the US State Department
announced it was to investigate its employee
Huma Ubedin, a long-term trusted aide of
Hillary Clinton, for conflicts of interest in her
consultancy work for Teneo. The conservative
group Citizens United is suing the State
Department for not responding to requests for
email exchanges between Clinton and her staff,
and Teneo. It is set to be a point of controversy
during Clinton’s presidential campaign. •
Declan Kelly