1990 Irish presidential election

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1990 Irish presidential election

← 1983 7 November 1990 1997 →
Turnout64.1%
 
Mary Robinson, May 1995 01 (cropped).jpg
Brian Lenihan, 1981 (cropped).jpg
Austin Currie 2014 (cropped).jpg
Nominee Mary Robinson Brian Lenihan Austin Currie
Party Labour Fianna Fáil Fine Gael
Alliance
1st round 612,265
38.9%
694,484
44.1%
267,902
17.0%
2nd round 817,830
51.9%
731,273
46.5%
Eliminated


President before election

Patrick Hillery
Fianna Fáil

Elected President

Mary Robinson
Labour

The 1990 Irish presidential election was the tenth presidential election to be held in Ireland, the fifth to be contested by more than one candidate, and the first to have a female candidate and winner. It was held on Wednesday, 7 November 1990 and was won by Mary Robinson on a joint Labour Party and Workers' Party ticket. The election was the first time in history a Fianna Fáil candidate failed to win the Presidency. It was also the first time the Labour Party had contested a Presidential election. The election had one of the tightest margins of victory in Irish Presidential elections history, and the final leg of the campaign was characterised by intense internal turmoil within the Fianna Fáil party as well as personal attacks on the candidates from competing political parties. The election was considered a political failure for the Fine Gael party and would cause their leader, Alan Dukes, to resign in the immediate aftermath.

One of the central issues during the campaign was whether the role of the President should be expanded or not, with Robinson and Currie arguing it should while Lenihan argued against it. In the years following Robinson's election, she would transform the position into a much more visible and influential position in Irish politics.

Nomination procedure[edit]

Under Article 12 of the Constitution of Ireland, a candidate for president could be nominated by:

The outgoing president, Patrick Hillery, had served the maximum of two terms, and no other former president was living.

The deadline for nominations was 16 October 1990.[1]

Nomination campaigns[edit]

Labour and the Workers' Party[edit]

In January 1990, Labour leader Dick Spring publicly stated his belief that the Labour Party needed to run a serious candidate in the election and that if no other candidate could be found, he himself would run.[2]

The first viable candidate Labour sought was Mary Robinson; with her background in both the Seanad and her legal work, both of which saw her fighting for causes such as women's and minority rights, Robinson seem to have excellent credentials for the role of President. However, a major stumbling block towards recruiting Robinson was her reluctance to rejoin/reaffiliate with the Labour Party.[c] This delay in the recruitment of Robinson allowed for a second contender to emerge in the Labour camp: Dr Noel Browne.[2]

Dr Noel Browne was a politician who had first emerged into Irish politics as a member of Clann na Poblachta and a Minister for Health in his very first term as a Teachta Dala as part of the first "interparty" government of 1948. Browne was initially lauded for his successful crusade against Tuberculous in Ireland, but his plan to introduce the Mother and Child Scheme was a major component in bringing down the government. From that time on, Browne was a persistent figure in Irish national politics but frequently found himself unable to integrate himself into party politics. After moving through a number of parties in the 1950s and 1960s, Browne was part of Labour for 14 years between 1963 and 1977. He would eventually leave the party in a bitter dispute over forming a formal electoral alliance with Fine Gael.

Spring's announcement in January had piqued Browne's interest and that of his supporters (which included Labour members such as Michael D. Higgins and Emmet Stagg). They quickly moved to explore options for how Browne could stand in elections, which led to Browne having an inconclusive meeting with the Workers' Party at the end of January. Browne's manoeuvring caught the attention of the Irish news media, who began to openly speculate about the prospect of a Browne candidacy, almost to the exclusion of Robinson. On 26 March, Browne was able to secure the endorsement of the Labour Women's National Council, a sub-organisation within the Labour Party with former ties to Robinson.[2]

However, the Spring-Robinson talks continued to progress in parallel to Browne's movements, and on 4 April, Spring held a meeting of the Parliamentary Labour Party to discuss each candidate. A vote proposing Noel Browne as Labour's candidate was defeated by a 4 to 1 ratio, while a subsequent vote proposing Robinson succeeded.[2]

Browne was bitterly disappointed to not receive the nomination and would for the remainder of his life hold a caustic view of Robinson.[2][4][5] Nevertheless, it has been suggested that many of his supporters transferred their allegiance to Robinson once she became Labour's nominee and that they were a key component in her campaign.[2]

Although Robinson had secured the Labour Party's nomination, she was not yet eligible to formally enter the race as the Labour Party consisted of only 15 Teachtaí Dála and 4 senators, and the support of 20 members of the Oireachtas was required to enter the race. In order to secure the final signatures required, the Labour Party worked together with the Workers' Party, who had 7 TDs.

By May 1990, Robinson was the formal joint Labour and Workers' Party nominee, and the first candidate to enter the race.[6]

Fine Gael[edit]

Garret FitzGerald and Peter Barry were both approached by Alan Dukes to run on behalf of Fine Gael, but declined.

At the 1990 Fine Gael Ard Fheis, party leader Alan Dukes promised that he would find a "candidate of vigour and stature" to contest the election. However, Dukes had great difficulty in trying to secure a candidate from his party's ranks, primarily due to their perception that Fianna Fáil's Brian Lenihan would be a runaway favourite to win.[7] Dukes attempted to secure the candidacies of former Taoiseach Garret FitzGerald and former Tánaiste Peter Barry but failed.[8]

With his options dwindling, Dukes turned to the newly elected Teachta Dala Austin Currie. Currie had only entered the Dáil for the first time 15 months previously following the 1989 general election. However, Currie had an extensive background as a political activist in Northern Ireland as part of the civil rights movement in Northern Ireland and as a former member of the Social Democratic and Labour Party.

After Dukes convinced Currie to stand,[9] Currie's nomination was confirmed by a unanimous vote of Fine Gael's parliamentary party on 12 September.[7][10] By that point, it was already well known to the public that Brian Lenihan would be frontrunner for the Fianna Fáil nomination.[10]

Fianna Fáil[edit]

John Wilson contested the Fianna Fáil nomination, but lost by a wide margin of votes to the favoured Brian Lenihan

On 17 September 1990, Fianna Fáil selected their candidate by holding a vote amongst members of their parliamentary party. Two members put their names forward: Brian Lenihan Snr, the Tánaiste and Minister for Defence and John Wilson, Minister for the Marine. Lenihan won the vote 51 to 19.[11][12][13]

Failed Independent bid by Carmencita Hederman[edit]

On 15 October (the day before the nomination deadline) recently elected Senator and former Lord Mayor of Dublin Carmencita Hederman asked Dublin City Council to support her and to give her a nomination towards the Presidency.[1] However, the motion was defeated by 31 votes to 5. Councillors from Fianna Fáil, Fine Gael, the Progressive Democrats and the Workers' Party cited that they could not support her bid, as their parties had already given their support to other candidates or ruled themselves neutral.[1] Hederman's bid was supported by Independent TDs such as Tony Gregory and Seán Dublin Bay Rockall Loftus as well Green TD Roger Garland.[1] Hederman did not petition any additional councils following her failure to secure a nomination from Dublin City Council.[14]

Hederman asserted on 15 October that the Progressive Democrats had promised to support her bid contingent on her securing 20,000 signatures of public support, but pulled their pledge at the last moment. Mary Harney denied this, and stated she had told Hederman her support was contingent on Hederman securing the backing of 11 other TDs. Ultimately, the Progressive Democrats declared "neutrality" in the election, and did not officially support any candidate.[1]

Campaign and issues[edit]

When Lenihan entered the race in mid-September, he was considered the odds-on favourite; no Fianna Fáil candidate had ever lost a presidential election.

Role of the President[edit]

Immediately upon his selection as the Fianna Fáil candidate on 17 September, Lenihan stated that he felt that expanding the role of the President was "not an issue in this campaign" and suggested it was not possible for any candidate to, by themselves, expand the role. Lenihan were in response to previous comments by both Robinson and Currie suggesting they could and would develop the Presidency into a more active role in Irish politics.[15][16] From as early as April 1990, Robinson made clear her ambitions to expand the role of the presidency.[17]

Broad party support for Robinson[edit]

On October 11, the Green Party announced that it had held a ballot of its members and they had overwhelmingly voted to officially support Robinson's campaign bid.[18] Robinson welcomed the announcement and stated her belief that environmentalism was an area in which the office of President could provide leadership.[18]

In addition to enjoying the formal support of 3 separate political parties and their canvassers, many Fine Gael canvassers choose to provide support for Robinson over Currie. Polling carried out by The Irish Times by 16 October showed that half of those who considered themselves Fine Gael supporters favoured Robinson over Currie.[19] Following the end of the campaign, Currie would cite the fact that many Fine Gael activists choose to support Robinson over himself as damaging his own campaign.[20]

Furthermore, although their party was officially "neutral", many Progressive Democrats activists were broadly sympathetic to Robinson's social views and were also attracted to offering her support. This support intensified following Michael McDowell's robust defence of Robinson in the face of personal attacks by Fianna Fáil's Padraig Flynn (See Flynn personal remarks about Robinson below for more).

"Red Scare" tactics[edit]

The early and strong support amongst Fine Gael voters for Robinson alarmed the Fine Gael camp, who reacted by engaging in Red Scare tactics against Robinson rather than focusing on the favourite Lenihan. Immediately upon the confirmation that Currie was in the race, prominent members of Fine Gael, such as Jim Mitchell and Michael Noonan, suggested that Robinson would be the "acceptable face of Socialism in Ireland" and that a victory for Robinson would be a victory for the Workers' Party.[19]

Members of Fianna Fáil would repeat similar accusations as the polls tightened and it became apparent that Robinson was a credible threat to Lenihan's campaign.[21]

Robinson Hot Press interview[edit]

In September 1990, the magazine Hot Press conducted a 90-minute interview with Robinson. The audio was recorded and certain portions were later transcribed in order to be used in print. Two weeks passed between the actual interview and its eventual appearance in the October edition of the monthly magazine. Upon the release of the interview, the Fianna Fáil affiliated newspaper The Irish Press lead that day with a front-page headline reading "LONGEST SUICIDE NOTE IN HISTORY" and an article by Emily O’Reilly focusing on Robinson responding "Yes" when asked in the interview if she would, as president, officiate the opening of a stall selling contraceptives in a Virgin Megastore.[d] Both Lenihan and Currie accused Robinson of making a political gaffe with this response. The Robinson camp initially claimed Robinson had been misquoted, but when Liam Fay, the journalist for Hot Press, was able to produce the audio recording of the interview, his transcription was proven correct. The Robinson camp changed tack, and claimed that Robinson had not meant "Yes, I would", but simply that because of her legal background, she was in the habit of advancing dialogue by saying "Yes" as an interjection. Robinson would henceforth deny that she would preside over any illegal activity should she win the election.[22][23][24]

The Lenihan tape[edit]

Although Lenihan was the initial favourite to win the election, his campaign was derailed when he confirmed in an on-the-record interview with freelance journalist and academic researcher Jim Duffy that he had been involved in controversial attempts to pressurise President Patrick Hillery not to dissolve the Dáil in 1982.[25][26] After the contrast between his public denials during the campaign and his eventual confirmation of his role during his earlier interview recorded in May the Progressive Democrats, then in coalition with Fianna Fáil, threatened to support an opposition motion of no confidence unless Lenihan was dismissed from the government or an inquiry into the 1982 events was set up.[26] The incident caused Lenihan's support to drop from 43% to 32% with Robinson going from 38% to 51%.[27] Taoiseach Charles Haughey privately asked Lenihan to resign, and sacked him on 31 October—a week before the election—when he refused to do so leading to a sympathy vote for Lenihan; his support in the polls going from 32% on 29 October to 42% on 3 November (with Robinson's support dropping from 51 to 42%).[28]

Flynn personal remarks about Robinson[edit]

"She was pretty well constructed for this campaign by her handlers in the Labour Party and the Workers' Party. Of course, it doesn't always suit if you get labelled a socialist, because that's a very narrow focus in this country, so she has to try and have it both ways. She has to have new clothes and her new look and her new hairdo and she has the new interest in her family, being a mother, all that kind of thing. But none of us, you know, none of us who knew Mary Robinson very well in previous incarnations ever heard her claiming to be a great wife and mother. Mary Robinson reconstructs herself to fit the fashion of the time, so we have this thing that you can be substituted at will, whether it's the pro-socialist thing, or pro-contraception, or pro-abortion, whatever it is. But at least we should know. Mary Robinson is a socialist; she says it and has admitted it previously. Now she may have changed her mind, and if she has changed her mind, so be it. But at least she should tell us that she has changed her mind and not be misleading us."

Padraig Flynn during an appearance on RTÉ Radio 1 on 3 November 1990, [29][30]

On 3 November, just days before voting was due to take place, cabinet minister Pádraig Flynn of Fianna Fáil made an appearance on the RTÉ Radio 1 show Saturday View alongside Michael McDowell of the Progressive Democrats and Brendan Howlin of the Labour Party. During the segment, Flynn launched a personal attack on Mary Robinson, accusing her of "having a new-found interest in her family" as part of a new public persona introduced for the campaign.[25] An infuriated McDowell, whose party had been broadly sympathetic to Lenihan and Fianna Fáil until that moment, excoriated Flynn, immediately calling the remarks a "disgrace", called upon Flynn to withdraw them and told him to "learn some manners". Similarly, an incensed Howlin called the remarks typical of a Fianna Fáil campaign in which "no dirt was too awful, no smear too great", and accused Flynn of outright lying about Robinson. Flynn did not withdraw the remark during the course of the programme, however, following an immediate and powerful public backlash, Flynn hurried to publicly withdraw the remark later the same day.[31]

Flynn's attack was a fatal blow to Lenihan's campaign, causing many female supporters of Lenihan to vote for Robinson in a gesture of support.[32][33][34][35]

Lenihan received a plurality of first-preference votes. Robinson received more than twice as many votes as Currie, and 76.73% of Currie's votes transferred to Robinson, beating Lenihan into second place and electing Robinson as Ireland's first female president.[28]

Result[edit]

1990 Irish presidential election[36]
Candidate Nominated by % 1st Pref Count 1 Count 2
Mary Robinson Oireachtas: Labour Party and Workers' Party 38.9 612,265 817,830
Brian Lenihan Oireachtas: Fianna Fáil 44.1 694,484 731,273
Austin Currie Oireachtas: Fine Gael 17.0 267,902  
Electorate: 2,471,308   Valid: 1,574,651   Spoilt: 9,444 (0.6%)   Quota: 787,326   Turnout: 64.1%
First preference vote
Lenihan
44.1%
Robinson
38.9%
Currie
17.0%
Final percentage
Robinson
51.9%
Lenihan
46.5%

Results by constituency[edit]

First count votes[37]
Constituency Currie Lenihan Robinson
Votes % Votes % Votes %
Carlow–Kilkenny 9,941 18.8% 23,808 45.1% 19,054 36.1%
Cavan–Monaghan 10,049 21.2% 25,365 53.6% 11,923 25.2%
Clare 7,956 18.3% 21,669 50.0% 13,745 31.7%
Cork East 7,048 18.5% 16,928 44.4% 14,124 37.1%
Cork North-Central 6,038 15.5% 15,020 38.6% 17,832 45.9%
Cork North-West 8,414 27.7% 13,843 45.5% 8,162 26.8%
Cork South-Central 9,254 17.3% 18,176 33.9% 26,226 48.8%
Cork South-West 8,623 29.1% 11,957 40.4% 9,034 30.5%
Donegal North-East 3,958 17.1% 12,834 55.3% 6,397 27.6%
Donegal South-West 4,794 19.0% 13,344 53.0% 7,058 28.0%
Dublin Central 4,711 12.3% 17,855 46.7% 15,683 41.0%
Dublin North 3,931 11.4% 14,812 43.1% 15,637 45.5%
Dublin North-Central 4,752 12.7% 16,658 44.5% 16,064 42.8%
Dublin North-East 3,690 11.0% 13,939 41.3% 16,082 47.7%
Dublin North-West 2,795 10.1% 11,611 42.0% 13,240 47.9%
Dublin South 9,646 17.0% 17,948 31.7% 29,103 51.3%
Dublin South-Central 5,578 13.0% 16,847 39.4% 20,394 47.6%
Dublin South-East 5,528 16.6% 10,573 31.7% 17,262 51.7%
Dublin South-West 3,661 9.9% 15,340 41.7% 17,826 48.4%
Dublin West 6,439 13.4% 21,987 45.6% 19,772 41.0%
Dún Laoghaire 8,957 17.0% 14,974 28.4% 28,815 54.6%
Galway East 5,629 20.4% 13,883 50.4% 8,043 29.2%
Galway West 8,094 17.6% 18,885 41.1% 18,978 41.3%
Kerry North 5,192 17.2% 13,896 45.9% 11,155 36.9%
Kerry South 4,891 17.2% 14,230 50.0% 9,336 32.8%
Kildare 7,701 15.2% 21,388 42.2% 21,638 42.6%
Laois–Offaly 8,690 17.1% 25,635 50.4% 16,571 32.5%
Limerick East 7,498 17.6% 14,583 34.2% 20,527 48.2%
Limerick West 5,955 19.3% 16,055 51.2% 8,766 28.5%
Longford–Westmeath 7,716 18.7% 21,860 52.9% 11,741 28.4%
Louth 5,588 14.1% 20,134 50.8% 13,894 35.1%
Mayo East 5,023 18.7% 11,838 44.2% 9,947 37.1%
Mayo West 4,706 18.3% 12,114 47.1% 8,905 34.6%
Meath 8,174 16.7% 23,960 49.0% 16,818 34.3%
Roscommon 6,482 23.0% 14,454 51.3% 7,223 25.7%
Sligo–Leitrim 7,794 20.3% 18,917 49.3% 11,660 30.4%
Tipperary North 5,822 20.0% 14,373 49.4% 8,926 30.6%
Tipperary South 7,227 19.4% 17,317 46.4% 12,751 34.2%
Waterford 6,160 15.9% 17,236 44.5% 15,359 39.6%
Wexford 7,906 16.8% 21,790 46.5% 17,201 36.7%
Wicklow 5,891 14.1% 16,448 39.4% 19,393 46.5%
Total 267,902 17.0% 694,484 44.1% 612,265 38.9%
Second count result[37]
Constituency Lenihan Robinson
Votes % Votes %
Carlow–Kilkenny 25,103 48.4% 26,733 51.6%
Cavan–Monaghan 26,796 57.7% 19,664 42.3%
Clare 22,715 53.2% 20,004 46.8%
Cork East 17,836 47.8% 19,438 52.2%
Cork North-Central 15,934 41.6% 22,346 58.4%
Cork North-West 14,896 50.3% 14,711 49.7%
Cork South-Central 19,416 36.8% 33,301 63.2%
Cork South-West 13,084 45.6% 15,640 54.4%
Donegal North-East 13,384 59.4% 9,162 40.6%
Donegal South-West 13,915 56.5% 10,730 43.5%
Dublin Central 18,648 49.5% 19,042 50.5%
Dublin North 15,458 45.5% 18,563 54.5%
Dublin North-Central 17,394 47.1% 19,585 52.9%
Dublin North-East 14,537 43.7% 18,772 56.3%
Dublin North-West 12,059 44.2% 15,281 55.8%
Dublin South 19,330 34.7% 36,473 65.3%
Dublin South-Central 17,743 42.0% 24,517 58.0%
Dublin South-East 11,358 34.7% 21,418 65.3%
Dublin South-West 15,894 43.6% 20,573 56.4%
Dublin West 22,959 48.3% 24,668 51.7%
Dún Laoghaire 16,293 31.5% 35,527 68.5%
Galway East 14,486 53.4% 12,651 46.6%
Galway West 19,875 43.9% 25,472 56.1%
Kerry North 14,669 49.3% 15,096 50.7%
Kerry South 14,812 52.9% 13,238 47.1%
Kildare 22,493 45.1% 27,467 54.9%
Laois–Offaly 26,740 53.4% 23,397 46.6%
Limerick East 15,589 37.3% 26,235 62.7%
Limerick West 16,834 55.8% 13,380 44.2%
Longford–Westmeath 22,881 56.3% 17,795 43.7%
Louth 21,070 53.9% 18,053 46.1%
Mayo East 12,362 46.7% 14,162 53.3%
Mayo West 12,566 49.5% 12,845 50.5%
Meath 25,122 52.2% 23,037 47.8%
Roscommon 15,185 54.9% 12,495 45.1%
Sligo–Leitrim 19,906 52.7% 17,882 47.3%
Tipperary North 15,119 52.9% 13,483 47.1%
Tipperary South 18,299 50.2% 18,214 49.8%
Waterford 18,170 47.8% 19,880 52.2%
Wexford 22,990 49.9% 23,058 50.1%
Wicklow 17,353 42.2% 23,842 57.8%
Total 731,273 46.5% 817,830 51.9%

Aftermath[edit]

I was elected by the women of Ireland, Mná na hÉireann, who instead of rocking the cradle...rocked the system![38]

— Mary Robinson, Victory speech, 9 November 1990

Both the immediate and long-term reactions to Robinson's election were to declare it a turning point in Irish social and political history. The Irish Press, a national newspaper staunchly aligned with Fianna Fáil, immediately stated that the election "signals a change in Irish society and a shift away from traditional attitudes and allegiances".[39]

The result of the election brought an immediate end to the leadership of Alan Dukes over Fine Gael.

The result obtained by Austin Currie for Fine Gael, just 17%, was considered a terrible result for the party and immediately undermined the credibility of party leader Alan Dukes. Dukes resigned his position as party leader on 20 November 1990.[7][40]

Footnotes[edit]

  1. ^ The Workers' Party helped formally nominate Robinson
  2. ^ Although the Green Party did not formally nominate Robinson, following a balloting of their membership on 11 October, they provided her with their official support.
  3. ^ Robinson had left the Labour Party in 1985. Officially, she cited the exclusion of Ulster Unionists from the drafting of the Anglo-Irish Agreement by the Fine Gael-Labour coalition government as the reason, but others have speculated that Robinson was personally hurt that Dick Spring choose to select John Rodgers as Attorney General of Ireland over her that same year.[3]
  4. ^ In 1990 Virgin Megastores in Ireland were openly selling condoms in defiance of Irish law.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e "Hederman fails to get a city council nomination". The Irish Times. 16 October 1990. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Horgan, John (8 October 2000). "Shades of Browne". The Irish Independent. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  3. ^ Horgan, John (1997). Mary Robinson: An Independent Voice. Dublin, Ireland: The O'Brien Press Ltd. p. 113. ISBN 978-0-86278-540-6.
  4. ^ Leo Varadkar (28 April 2021). "Speech of the Tánaiste, Leo Varadkar T.D., Trinity Monday Discourse on Noël Browne". MerrionStreet.ie. Retrieved 10 January 2023. As the 1990 presidential election approached, some of Browne's supporters, including Michael D. Higgins, worked to secure him the nomination of the Labour Party run. Despite the backing of the Labour Women's National Council, he was overwhelmingly defeated by Mary Robinson in the vote of the parliamentary party and administrative council. He never forgave her for it. Browne criticised her frequently during her term in office, for example, dismissing her candle in the window of the Áras to remember the diaspora as 'fatuous'. Towards the end of his life, he claimed he was happy he had not run for the 'impotent, titular post' and criticised Robinson for having 'squandered… her undoubted talents' on the role.
  5. ^ Murdoch, Alan (22 May 1997). "Obituary: Dr Noel Browne". The Independent. Retrieved 19 June 2023. This elicited a late reminder of his caustic invective last year. After Mary Robinson's 1990 election as state President, she placed a symbolic lamp in the window of her official residence as a reminder of all of those forced to leave Ireland to seek work. Accusing her of being part of a comfortable elite, he said her "fatuous, low-watt, low-powered, cheapest-available, warmly welcoming electrical candle brought no comfort to our diaspora"
  6. ^ Morgan, David Gwynn (1999). "Mary Robinson's Presidency: Relations With The Government". Irish Jurist. New Series. 34: 256–275. JSTOR 44026473. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  7. ^ a b c Bresnihan, Valerie (June 1999). "The Symbolic Power of Ireland's President Robinson". Presidential Studies Quarterly. 29 (2): 250–262. doi:10.1111/1741-5705.00031. JSTOR 27551986. Retrieved 18 June 2023.
  8. ^ "Austin Currie, politician who co-founded the SDLP and fought anti-Catholic discrimination and violent Republicanism with equal vigour – obituary". The Telegraph. 10 November 2021. Retrieved 18 June 2023. Alan Dukes, FitzGerald's successor as party leader, pressed Currie to stand for the presidency of the Republic in 1990, Fine Gael's obvious candidate, Peter Barry, having ruled himself out.
  9. ^ Webber, Jude (10 November 2021). "Austin Currie: Politician and civil rights activist 1939-2021". Financial Times. Retrieved 18 June 2023. made a failed presidential bid in 1990 having been prevailed upon to run, according to one former party colleague.
  10. ^ a b "Wilson says Presidential challenge is not a ploy". The Irish Times. 12 September 1990. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  11. ^ "Lenihan Gets Nomination". RTÉ News. 17 September 1990. Retrieved 18 June 2023. Brian Lenihan won the nomination for Fianna Fáil candidate for the presidency at a meeting of the Parliamentary Party this morning. He defeated the Minister for the Marine, John Wilson, by fifty-one votes to nineteen.
  12. ^ McKenna, Gene (10 July 2007). "John Wilson 'excelled as a scholar, teacher and politician'". The Irish Independent. Retrieved 18 June 2023. In 1990, he unsuccessfully challenged the late Brian Lenihan for the Fianna Fail nomination for the presidential election in which the latter was beaten by Mary Robinson.
  13. ^ O'Regan, Michael (10 July 2007). "Hugely respected politician, teacher and footballer". The Irish Times. Retrieved 18 June 2023. In November 1990, he succeeded Brian Lenihan as tánaiste, having failed to secure the Fianna Fáil nomination to contest the presidency.
  14. ^ Murphy, Gary; Reidy, Theresa (December 2012). "Presidential Elections in Ireland: From Partisan Predictability to the End of Loyalty". Irish Political Studies. 27 (4): 615–634. doi:10.1080/07907184.2012.734452. S2CID 144908205. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  15. ^ "Lenihan gets nomination". RTÉ.ie. 17 September 1990. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  16. ^ "Mary Robinson on Presidency". RTE News. 19 November 1990. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  17. ^ "Robinson on Presidency". RTÉ.ie. 4 April 1990. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  18. ^ a b "Greens to back Robinson". The Irish Times. 11 October 1990. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  19. ^ a b "FG again stresses socialist factor in Robinson campaign". The Irish Times. 17 October 1990. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  20. ^ "Historic Victory for Robinson". The Irish Times. 9 November 1990. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  21. ^ Galligan, Y. (2012). "Transforming the Irish Presidency: Activist Presidents and Gender Politics, 1990–2011". Irish Political Studies. 27 (4): 596–614. doi:10.1080/07907184.2012.734451. S2CID 144386838. Retrieved 19 June 2023. Robinson's own campaign came under pressure in the final days. Her commitment to social justice was cast as 'red' politics by Fianna Fail.
  22. ^ Fay, Liam (21 June 2007). "The day Mary Robinson said yes". Hot Press. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  23. ^ "October 6th, 1990". The Irish Times. 6 October 1990. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  24. ^ "Currie interviewed regarding Presidency". RTÉ.ie. 1 November 1990. Retrieved 19 June 2023. Currie: I haven't been involved in controversies in relation to Hot Press articles, I haven't been involved in controversies in relation to phone calls or whatever, my judgement has been correct and I think in that respect the Irish people will appreciate that.
  25. ^ a b "Flashback 1990: Mary Robinson's election as president". The Irish Independent. 8 November 2015. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  26. ^ a b White, Lawrence William (October 2009). "Lenihan, Brian Joseph". Dictionary of Irish Biography. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  27. ^ Sinnott, Richard (1995). Irish voters decide: Voting behaviour in elections and referendums since 1918. Manchester University Press. pp. 268–269. ISBN 0-7190-4037-X.
  28. ^ a b Sinnott 1995, p. 269.
  29. ^ Keogh, Dermot (1 September 2005). Twentieth-century Ireland part 6: Revolution and State Building. Gill Books. ISBN 9780717159437.
  30. ^ "Flynn diatribe against Robinson". RTE.ie. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  31. ^ "Flynn apologises for RTE remark". The Irish Times. 5 November 1990. Retrieved 19 June 2023.
  32. ^ Sinnott 1995, p. 272.
  33. ^ Shiel, Tom (22 December 2008). "Robinson has no hard feelings over Flynn jibe". The Irish Times. Retrieved 19 June 2023. A comment by Mr Flynn in which he accused Mrs Robinson as "having a new-found interest in her family" is generally regarded as having backfired and damaged the campaign of the Fianna Fáil candidate Brian Lenihan.
  34. ^ Dwyer, Ryle (2 June 2007). "McDowell could start a row in an empty room but he'll be a big loss". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 19 June 2023. McDowell played a crucial role in the election of Mary Robinson as President. It was he who took on Pádraig Flynn over his shoddy attack during an RTÉ interview. Flynn had ridiculed Robinson's sense of family values with a snide insinuation that she had had some marital problems. McDowell responded with a blistering lecture that not only silenced the garrulous Flynn but also destroyed Lenihan's chances of winning the presidency.
  35. ^ Gallagher, M.; Marsh, M. (1991). "Republic of Ireland presidential election: 7 November 1990". West European Politics. 14 (4): 169–173. doi:10.1080/01402389108424881. Retrieved 19 June 2023. Although dismissal from government is hardly a glowing recommendation of fitness to be president, Lenihan's standing in the polls began to rise, as Fianna Fail supporters seemed to feel that losing his governmental position wiped the slate clean of his transgressions, and the final polls on 2–3 November put Robinson and Lenihan neck and neck on first preferences. This late rally may have been stymied by some rather tasteless attacks on Mrs Robinson, culminating in comments made by Padraig Flynn, Minister for the Environment, on a 3 November radio programme. References to a 'new found interest' in her family since the image makers got to work provoked considerable protests, especially among women, and were later withdrawn, though not before the damage had been done.
  36. ^ "Presidential Election November 1990". ElectionsIreland.org. Archived from the original on 22 June 2006. Retrieved 23 November 2009.
  37. ^ a b "Presidential Elections 1938–2018". Government of Ireland. p. 31. Retrieved 10 November 2018.
  38. ^ "President Robinson's Acceptance Speech". President.ie. 9 November 1990. Retrieved 18 June 2023.
  39. ^ "Leftist Lawyer Is Elected President of Ireland". The New York Times. 10 November 1990. Retrieved 18 June 2023.
  40. ^ Collins, Niall (1991). "The Irish presidential election of 1990". Electoral Studies. 10 (2): 155–157. doi:10.1016/0261-3794(91)90047-v. JSTOR 44026473. Retrieved 18 June 2023.