Irish Farmers' Association Explained

Irish Farmers' Association
Location Country:Republic of Ireland
Members:72,000
Founded:1955
Headquarters:Irish Farm Centre, Bluebell, Dublin

The Irish Farmers' Association (IFA) (Irish: Feirmeoirí Aontaithe na hÉireann) is a national organisation to represent the interests of all sectors of farming in the Republic of Ireland. The IFA is Ireland's largest farming representative organisation and has operated more than 60 years.

The IFA represents Irish farmers at home and in Europe, lobbying and campaigning for improved conditions and incomes for farm families. It also provides representation, support and advice to members on an individual basis.

IFA is a democratic association, organised in branches, county executive and national committees.[1]

The IFA's head office is at the Irish Farm Centre, in Bluebell, Dublin. It also maintains 12 regional offices and an office in Brussels.

History

It was founded in January 1955 as the National Farmers Association (NFA), aiming to lead Irish farmers out of the depression and deprivation which had dominated rural Ireland for decades.

The NFA merged in the 1960s with four smaller organisations representing specific sectors (including Leinster Milk Producers (now Fresh Milk Producers), beet growers and horticulture) to form the Irish Farmers Association – the IFA.

In the 1972 referendum on Irish membership of the European Economic Community, the IFA campaigned for a "yes" vote, seeking access to European markets and higher prices for agricultural produce.

The IFA denounced the European Union–Mercosur Free Trade Agreement as a "disgraceful and feeble sell-out".[2]

Salary controversy

In November 2015 Eddie Downey (President) and Pat Smith (General Secretary) resigned following controversy over salaries. Smith's salary in 2013 had been €535,000. He resigned on 18 November. A week later members of the organisation's national executive council were informed that Smith had been given a €2m severance payment and €2.7m pension. Eddie Downey admitted he had signed off this agreement, and resigned. Downey was earning €147,000 a year plus €50,000 in add-ons when he resigned.[3]

The IFA confirmed that former IFA chief economist Con Lucey — who had attempted to raise concerns over financial issues and transparency before quitting under duress in 2014 — would oversee a review of salaries and expenses.

List of presidents

NameYearOrigin
Juan Greene1955–1962County Kildare
Rickard Deasy1962–1967County Tipperary
T. J. Maher1967–1976County Tipperary
Paddy Lane1976–1980County Clare
Donal Cashman1980–1984County Cork
Joe Rea1984–1988County Tipperary
Tom Clinton1988–1990County Meath
Alan Gillis1990–1994County Kildare
John Donnelly1994–1998County Galway
Tom Parlon1998–2002County Offaly
John Dillon2002–2006County Limerick
Padraig Walshe[4] 2006–2010County Laois
John Bryan[5] 2010–2014County Kilkenny
Eddie Downey2014–2015County Meath
Joe Healy2016–2020County Galway
Tim Cullinan2020–2024County Tipperary[6]
Francie Gorman[7] 2024–presentCounty Laois

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2023-10-18 . About Us . 2023-10-18 . ifa.ie . Irish Farmers' Association . en-US.
  2. Web site: Farmers, environmentalists slam 'sell-out' EU-Mercosur trade deal . France24 . 29 June 2019.
  3. News: Eddie Downey resigns as IFA face multi-million euro legal pay battle . Today's Stories . 26 November 2015 . Irish Examiner . 26 November 2015 . Ó Cionnaith, Fiachra . Cork.
  4. News: Walshe elected as IFA president. RTÉ News. 20 December 2005. 21 December 2009.
  5. News: Bryan elected IFA president. RTÉ News. 21 December 2009. 21 December 2009.
  6. News: Tim Cullinan elected president of Irish Farmers' Association. 18 December 2019. RTÉ News.
  7. News: 13 December 2023 . Laois farmer Francie Gorman elected Irish Farmers' Association president . RTÉ News.