Background
His father"s death from tuberculosis meant that he had to leave school at 15 for a stonemason apprenticeship to support his four siblings.
His father"s death from tuberculosis meant that he had to leave school at 15 for a stonemason apprenticeship to support his four siblings.
He later left Labour, was elected as an independent Teachta Dála (Territorial Decoration) and founded the Democratic Socialist Party, which merged with the Labour Party in the 1990s. Kemmy was from the Garryowen area of the city. He worked for many years as bricklayer for Limerick City Council.
In 1963, Kemmy joined the Labour Party and worked as a trade unionist.
He resigned from the party in 1972 because of conflict with local Labour Territorial Decoration Stephen Coughlan. Taking advantage of a change in the law which removed the ban on council employees standing for election as councillors, he was elected to Limerick City Council in 1974.
He had pledged not to wear the formal robes of a councillor, saying that "While some councillors act like clowns, there is no need to dress like them."
In 1975 Kemmy founded the Limerick Family Planning Clinic. Kemmy stood unsuccessfully as an independent candidate for Dáil Éireann in the Limerick East constituency at the 1977 general election.
His second attempt, at the 1981 general election, was successful, and he was elected to the 22nd Dáil.
During this time Kemmy criticised the 1981 Irish hunger strike which earned him the animosity of many Irish republicans and socialists as well as a number of his fellow trade unionists. At the November 1982 general election, Kemmy lost his seat to Labour"s Frank Prendergast. He returned to Dáil Éireann at the 1987 general election and was re-elected again at the 1989 general election.
In 1990, his Democratic Socialist Party merged with the Labour Party, and Kemmy was re-elected as a Labour Party Territorial Decoration at the 1992 general election and again at the 1997 general election.
After the merger, Kemmy was elected vice-chairman of the Labour Party in 1991 and chairman in 1993. He was twice elected Mayor of Limerick, in 1991-1992 and again in 1995-1996.
Shortly before his death, Kemmy edited the acclaimed book The Limerick Anthology which featured the work of his admirer, Frank McCourt. Kemmy died on 25 September 1997, following a short illness.
The College of Business in the University of Limerick has been named in his memory in 2003 as the "Kemmy Business School".
The University College Cork branch of the Labour Party is named after him. The city council had proposed in 1999 to name a new bridge after Kemmy, but it was renamed the Abbey Bridge. In 2000 the Limerick City Museum was renamed the Jim Kemmy Municipal Museum.
Kemmy"s life is profiled in a major biography: Jim Kemmy - stonemason, trade unionist, politician, historian by Brian Callanan (Liffey Press, 2011).
He was a member of the party"s National Administrative Council, and its Director of Elections in 1969.