William O'Malley | |
Office8: | Member of Parliament for Galway Connemara |
Term Start8: | 1895 |
Term End8: | 1918 |
Predecessor8: | Patrick James Foley |
Successor8: | Pádraic Ó Máille |
Birth Date: | c. February 1853 |
William O'Malley (circa February 1853 – September 1939) was an Irish journalist, sportsman, and politician. He was the Member of Parliament (MP) for Galway Connemara from 1895 to 1918.[1]
O'Malley was born at Ballyconneely, near Clifden, Ireland. He was educated at the Model School, Galway and at St Mary's teacher training college, Hammersmith, London.
He was a journalist and business manager of newspapers.[2] He married Mary O'Connor in 1886, becoming brother-in-law to T. P. O'Connor. She was a Nationalist activist, who spoke at Land League meetings in the 1880s and was imprisoned for six months.[3] One of their sons was killed in action in the First World War.[4]
At the 1895 general election, O'Malley stood for as an Anti-Parnellite Irish National Federation candidate to succeed Patrick James Foley the MP Galway Connemara in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom. He was elected unopposed,[5] and was re-elected unopposed as a member of the Irish Parliamentary Party in 1900, 1906, and January and December 1910. He resided in England throughout his parliamentary career, returning to Ireland in 1921.[6]
O'Malley criticised the ITGWU during the Dublin Lockout as engaging in "despotism", while describing Jim Larkin as a "wild egotistical fanatic".[7] In 1918, standing again with the IPP, O'Malley lost to Pádraic Ó Máille of Sinn Féin, winning only 23% of the vote.
His involvement in dubious speculative business ventures was widely criticised.[8]
He died in September 1939, aged 86.