Rena Donaghey
Rena Donaghey is an Irish politician from County Donegal. Donaghey has served as chairman of the ETB (elected October 2017), as well as deputy chairman (elected September 2019, and again in December 2023).[1][2][3] She was first elected to Donegal County Council in 1999.[4] At the 2019 election, Donaghey was elected on the first count and for a sixth time.[1] In June 2020, she succeeded Nicolas Crossan as Cathaoirleach ("First Citizen"), becoming the first female Fianna Fáil member to be elected Cathaoirleach in its 121-year history.[4][5][6][7] As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, this was the first time since January 2020 that a meeting could take place.[4] During her first address as Cathaoirleach she had a moment of silence for those who had died due to COVID-19.[4] She used the occasion to draw attention to the controversial issue of sex ratio within power politics.[8] She also took the opportunity to mention Manus Kelly, the politician who had died in tragic circumstances shortly following the election of the previous year, and also found time to give her condolences to Martin Farren, another politician, whose wife Eileen had died a short time before.[4] As Cathaoirleach Donaghey expressed interest in giving her focus to rural broadband, hospitality and tourism.[4] From Buncrana, she was the first woman from that town to accede to the position of Cathaoirleach.[9] With Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine Charlie McConalogue, she launched the "Ireland's DNA" initiative in 2021 and received coverage in national media as a result.[10] Also in 2021, she launched the long-awaited Joe Bonnar Link Road, which was facilitated by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), one of the European Structural and Investment Funds allocated by the European Union.[11] She also embarked on a unique cross-border joint effort with the mayors of Strabane and Derry cities to urge compliance with the COVID-19 restrictions, as the pandemic threatened to escalate out of control.[12] This initiative was particularly to the fore when the An Taoiseach Leo Varadkar placed Donegal onto special Level 3 restrictions in September 2020.[13] In 2012, Donaghey was involved in a high-profile email war with a famous environmentalist over the position of a German ship (see related pollution of ships in Europe), which had set anchor to a body of water off the Irish coast.[14] Donaghey is and remains a rare elected female politician in Donegal. Married to Patrick since 1984, she is a mother of several children, and has now gone on to be a grandmother as well.[4] References
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