Career
He served for three years as Archbishop of Dublin before dying of cancer. A former academic, Kevin McNamara was appointed by Pope Paul VI to succeed Bishop Eamon Casey in the diocese of Kerry. In office, McNamara and the neighbouring Bishop of Limerick, Jeremiah Newman, became the most outspoken conservative voices in the Irish hierarchy.
They were seemingly out of step with the more diplomatic Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland, Tomás Ó Fiaich and with the Archbishop of Dublin and Primate of Ireland, Dermot Ryan.
McNamara and Newman were particularly outspoken on the issue of a proposed pro-life amendment to the Irish constitution. While other bishops advocated people vote with their conscience in the referendum on the issue, McNamara and Newman instructed Catholics that they had a duty to "vote yes" to the referendum.
In 1984, the archdiocese of Dublin became vacant when its archbishop, Dermot Ryan, was given a senior appointment in the Roman Curia. (Ryan was expected to be made a cardinal as a result of the appointment but died suddenly in office before a consistory could be held) The outspoken Bishop of Kerry was controversially picked to replace the more liberal Ryan in Dublin.
Relations between Alibrandi and the coalition had broken down, with the government requesting that Alibrandi be removed because of his suspected closeness to Irish republicans in Sinn Féin and to the opposition Fianna Fáil party and in particular its leader, Charles Haughey.
Critics accused Alibrandi of engineering McNamara"s appointment in the belief that the outspoken McNamara could help derail the coalition"s liberal policies on divorce and contraception. McNamara, as expected, took a far more outspoken stance of issues than had Ryan previously. While the coalition succeeded in liberalising the law on contraception, its efforts to amend the constitution on divorce were defeated.
McNamara"s reign in Dublin was short-lived.
Archbishop McNamara was succeeded as archbishop by a university lecturer, Desmond Connell. There is a laudatory biography of Archbishop McNamara by Louis Power.