Timmy Conway Explained

Office:Senator
Term Start:13 May 1982
Term End:25 April 1987
Constituency:Industrial and Commercial Panel
Term Start1:8 October 1981
Term End1:13 May 1982
Constituency1:Nominated by the Taoiseach
Birth Date:27 October 1942
Birth Place:County Kildare, Ireland

Timothy Conway (born 27 October 1942)[1] is an Irish former politician from Naas in County Kildare. An accountant and long-serving local councillor, he served for six years as a senator in the 1980s and later contested two general elections. In the course of his political career he switched party twice, moving from the Labour Party to the Progressive Democrats and then to Fine Gael.

Political career

Conway joined the Labour Party as a trainee accountant in the 1970s, and was later elected as a member of Kildare County Council. He was Labour's director of elections in the Kildare constituency at the 1981 general election, after which he was nominated by the Taoiseach, Garret FitzGerald, as a member of the 15th Seanad. The appointment was explained by the Labour Party's secretary, Seamus Scally, as an organisational one: Conway would be responsible for organising and improving the finances of the party in the Leinster area.[2]

The following year he was elected to the 16th Seanad, topping the poll on the Industrial and Commercial Panel.[3] He was re-elected in 1983 to the 17th Seanad, this time coming second in the first-preference votes behind Fianna Fáil's Eoin Ryan.[4]

He left the Labour Party in 1986 to become a founder member of the new Progressive Democrats party (PDs). He did not contest the 1987 elections to the 18th Seanad because the Progressive Democrats policy at the time called for the abolition of the Seanad. At the 1989 general election he stood unsuccessfully as a Progressive Democrats candidate in the Kildare constituency, and he was unsuccessful again when he stood in the new Kildare North constituency in 1997.[5]

Conway remained a member of Kildare County Council and of Naas Town Council, where he initiated the town's twinning with the American city of Omaha, Nebraska. He was one of three of the town's nine councillors whose council-funded trip to Omaha was described by another councillor as a "gravy train".[6] He was twice chairman of the county council, and served as Mayor of Naas from 2002 to 2003. However, in June 2003 he left the Progressive Democrats to join Fine Gael,[7] and in the 2004 local elections he lost his seats on both the town council and the county council.[8] [9]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Timothy Conway . Oireachtas Members Database . 22 February 2008.
  2. News: Senate choice widens rift . Denis Coghlan . 20 August 1981 . The Irish Times. 7 February 2008. 1&9.
  3. News: Senate elections: Carroll loses as Barnes takes Labour panel seat . 23 April 1982 . The Irish Times . 7 February 2008 . 6.
  4. News: Senate results . 3 February 1983 . The Irish Times . 7 February 2008. 6.
  5. Web site: Timmy Conway. ElectionsIreland.org . 22 February 2008.
  6. Web site: Twinning is a waste of money . 4 March 2002 . Kildare Nationalist . 22 February 2008. dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20050524091457/http://archives.tcm.ie/kildarenationalist/2002/03/04/story1038.asp . 24 May 2005 .
  7. News: Naas Mayor leaves PDs for Fine Gael . 16 June 2003 . RTÉ News . 22 February 2008.
  8. Web site: "Bloodbath" in Naas as five cllrs replaced . 17 June 2004 . Kildare Nationalist . 22 February 2008 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110622080520/http://archives.tcm.ie/kildarenationalist/2004/06/17/story17739.asp . 22 June 2011 .
  9. Web site: Prominent cllrs lose seats in 'bloodbath' . 17 June 2004 . Kildare Nationalist . 22 February 2008 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20050818182745/http://archives.tcm.ie/kildarenationalist/2004/06/17/story17752.asp . 18 August 2005 .