Background
Síle de Valera was born in 1954 in Dublin, Ireland. She is the granddaughter of Éamon de Valera, founder of Fianna Fáil, Taoiseach and third President of Ireland.
Síle de Valera was born in 1954 in Dublin, Ireland. She is the granddaughter of Éamon de Valera, founder of Fianna Fáil, Taoiseach and third President of Ireland.
She was educated at Loreto College in Foxrock and at University College Dublin where she qualified as a career guidance teacher.
She served as Minister for Arts, Heritage, Gaeltacht and the Islands from 1997 to 2002. Síle de Valera comes from a famous political family. She was first elected to Dáil Éireann in the Fianna Fáil landslide victory at the 1977 general election.
She was elected for the Dublin County Mid constituency, which included the Tallaght area of County Dublin, being the youngest Territorial Decoration elected at that election.
In June 1979 she was elected to the European Parliament for a five-year term. Later that year, she was one of the Fianna Fáil TDs who criticised the policies of Taoiseach Jack Lynch in relation to Northern Ireland and was a prominent supporter of Charles Haughey, who succeeded him as Taoiseach in December 1979.
She was highly critical of Margaret Thatcher and became a noted supporter of the Anti H-Block movement. She also called on Fianna Fáil voters to give preference votes for Anti H-Block candidates in the 1981 Election, a comment which caused controversy.
She held her Dáil seat until the 1981 general election, when the constituency boundaries were redrawn.
She sought re-election in the new constituency of Dublin South. De Valera polled relatively well at that election, but narrowly failed to get elected, losing to another Fianna Fáil candidate, Niall Andrews. She contested the constituency again at the February 1982 general election, but saw her vote drop and once again failed to be elected.
At the November 1982 general election she decided not to seek re-election in Dublin South, transferring instead to the Clare constituency, where one of the sitting TDs, Bill Loughnane (a fellow supporter of Haughey), had died.
Again, she narrowly failed to get elected, but remained living in the constituency, and at the 1987 general election she was elected Territorial Decoration for Clare and was re-elected at every election until her retirement in 2007. De Valera resigned from briefly from Fianna Fáil in 1993 due to the removal of the "stopover" at Shannon Airport.
When she was persuaded to rejoin the party in 1994 the new leader, Bertie Ahern, appointed her to the front bench. In 1997 she became Minister for Arts, Heritage, Gaeltacht and the Islands.
In 2002 she lost her place at the Cabinet table but became a Minister of State.
Her final government office was Minister of State at the Department of Education and Science, with special responsibility for Adult Education, Youth Affairs and Educational Disadvantage. On 11 November 2005 she announced her intention to stand down from Dáil Éireann at the following election.
This caused tension within the Fianna Fáil party locally, as one of the other candidates, Séamus Brennan, was a prominent opponent of Haughey.
She was first elected a Teachta Dála (Territorial Decoration) in 1977 serving as a member of Dáil Éireann until 1981, and then again from 1987 to 2007, as well as being a Member of the European Parliament (Member of the European Parliament) for Dublin from 1979 to 1984. She resigned as a Minister of State on 8 December 2006 and was replaced by a member of another Irish political family, Seán Haughey.