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Lafferty embraces Labour’s ‘extended family’

This article is from page 11 of the 2011-02-01 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 11 JPG

LABOUR’S hopes of winning a Dáil seat in Clare for the first time since 1992 received another major boost this week with the confirmation that a second member of what party leader Eamon Gilmore has called “our extended family” has come out in support of Michael McNamara’s bid to be elected to the 31st Dáil.

Labour’s most successful candidate at local government level elections in Clare over the past half a century, former county councillor Martin Lafferty has backed McNamara’s campaign to become only the third Labour candidate after Paddy Hogan and Dr Mosajeé Bhamjeé to be elected to Dáil Éireann.

“I’ve met him and I’m impressed with him,” Lafferty told The Clare People this week, “and I’m backing him to get elected to the Dáil. I will do my canvassing in my own way and I have been out looking for support for his bid to get elected to the Dáil and I will be asking all the people who voted for me down the years to vote for McNamara,” added Laffterty, who was a member of Clare County Council for 33 years between 1974 to 2007.

Lisdoonvarna man Lafferty was elected as a Labour Party candidate in the Clare County Council elections of 1974, 1979, 1985 and ‘91, before leaving the party in 1992 in opposition to the party decision to go into coalition with Fianna Fáil.

“I left Labour because before the General Election in 1992 party leader Dick Spring said that ‘the culture of Fianna Fáil was a cancer of Irish society’. Labour said they wouldn’t go into coalition with Fianna Fáil but they did, so I owed it to my supporters to leave. But now I’m supporting the Labour candidate, because I am impressed by his credentials,” added Lafferty.

Lafferty’s is the latest former Labour stalwart to embrace the party’s cause in Clare once more, following on from the decision of former mayor of Clare and current member of both Clare County Council and Shannon Town Council, Cllr Patricia McCarthy to back Mr McNamara’s Dáil bid.

“The support of the extended Labour family is crucial to the party’s chances of winning a seat in Clare,” party leader Eamon Gilmore told The Clare People on a visit to the constituency two weeks ago.

Meanwhile, current mayor of Clare Cllr Christy Curtin, who is another former Labour Party member, has declared that “the jury is still out on who I will support in the election”. However, The Clare People can reveal that party activists are hopeful that behind the scenes the county’s First Citizen will back Mr McNamar’s Dáil bid, without compromising his independent status.

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