Originally from Antrim, he is the son of Oliver and Brigid (née Totten) Kearney.[2] He lived in Derry at the time of his election.[3][2]
Before his election as an MLA, Kearney served as National Chairman of Sinn Féin, in which capacity he apologised "for all the lives lost during the Troubles".[4] His brother, Ciarán Kearney, husband of Jane (née Donaldson), is the son-in-law of the late Provisional Irish Republican Armyvolunteer and Sinn Féin politician Denis Donaldson, who was assassinated near Glenties in County Donegal after having been exposed as a British agent.[5]
Kearney was elected to the Northern Ireland Assembly as one of six MLAs for South Antrim at the 2016 Assembly election,[6] retaining his seat at the 2017 and 2022 elections.[7]
He was later appointed as a Junior Minister in the Northern Ireland Executive, following the restoration of the Assembly in January 2020;[8] remaining in this position until May 2022.[9]
References
^"Declan Kearney MLA". Sinn Féin. Retrieved 22 April 2024. Currently he is the Sinn Féin National Chairperson and has been central to the Party's all-Ireland development, and its negotiations and reconciliation strategies.
^McKeown, Gareth (9 May 2016). "DUP candidates take three seats in South Antrim". The Irish News. Retrieved 22 April 2024. Elected: Paul Girvan (DUP), Pam Cameron (DUP), Declan Kearney (SF), David Ford (Alliance), Steve Aiken (UUP) and Trevor Clarke (DUP).
^Manley, John (13 January 2020). "John O'Dowd misses out on executive seat". The Irish News. Retrieved 22 April 2024. SINN Féin national chairman Declan Kearney has been appointed as a Stormont junior minister alongside the DUP's assembly chief whip Gordon Lyons.