Hussey made history as Ireland's first female Minister for Education and Fine Gael's first female Cabinet minister.[2] During her tenure in education from 1982 to 1986, she introduced lasting reforms, such as the establishment of aural and oral exams and the creation of the National Parents Council.[3][4] An advocate for women’s rights, Hussey worked to increase female representation in politics and highlighted gender issues in broadcasting as a member of the Working Party on Women in Broadcasting.[3] Additionally, Hussey campaigned throughout the 1980s for the legalisation of divorce, a highly divisive issue at the time.[3] In 2011, the Times summarised Huessy ideologically as a "heavyweight Blueshirt Liberal".[5]
After leaving electoral politics in 1989, she became actively involved in the European Women’s Federation, encouraging women from former Eastern Bloc countries to engage in political life for the first time.[3] She was a committed Europhile and supporter of the European Union.[3][6] Hussey was also a published author, writing At the Cutting Edge: Cabinet Diaries 1982–1987 and Ireland Today: An Anatomy of a Changing State, offering insights into Irish politics and societal changes.
Early life
Gemma Moran was born in Bray, County Wicklow, in 1938. She was educated at Loreto College, Foxrock and at University College Dublin. Hussey had a successful career running a language school in the late 1960s and 1970s. She married Derry Hussey in 1964, and they had 3 children. Derry Hussey died in 2020.[7]
Political career
Senator
She was elected by the National University to Seanad Éireann, serving in the upper house of the Oireachtas, from 1977 until 1982. She sat as an Independent Senator for the first three years, before joining Fine Gael. She then served as Fine Gael Seanad Spokesperson on Women's Affairs from 1981 to 1982. She went on to be the party leader in the Seanad and leader of the Seanad from 1981 to 1982.[8]
Hussey served as Minister for Education in the Fine Gael–Labour Party coalition government of TaoiseachGarret FitzGerald from 1982 to 1986, during which time she was heavily criticised by teachers' unions during a bitter pay strike in 1984.[9] The 1980s was a decade of economic crisis and the government was faced with challenges caused by the precarious state of the public finances. This meant that she had to find ways to reduce the Education budget. One of her measures was to introduce charges for the school transport system, which proved unpopular. However, third-level enrolments were increasing rapidly and Hussey secured increased funding for higher education at a time of severe spending cutbacks.[10] In 1986, she became Minister for Social Welfare. FitzGerald considered creating a new ministry for Hussey as Minister for EEC affairs. However, she did not wish to compete with the Department of Foreign Affairs, and so declined the position.[11]
During a meeting with Keith Joseph, British Secretary of State for Education, Joseph boasted to Hussey that he held surgeries once a month, which was considered a high number in Britain. Hussey responded that she had to do clinics three days every week to hold on to her seat as a TD.[13]
The book of her cabinet diaries, At the Cutting Edge, published in 1990, was hailed as the most thorough and realistic account of life inside the cabinet in Ireland.[citation needed] She retired from politics at the 1989 general election.
Outside of the Oirechtas
In 1990, she was sharply criticised within her party for suggesting that she might support the Labour Party presidential candidate, Mary Robinson, a feminist, over the official Fine Gael candidate Austin Currie. Mary Robinson went on to become Ireland's first female President.
An enthusiastic Europhile, Hussey spent a lot of her time promoting the advancement of women in politics around the European Union.
In the lead-up to the 1997 presidential election, Hussey was mentioned as a possible Fine Gael candidate and was predicted to do well across Dublin and in her native Wicklow constituency and among supporters of Fine Gael and of the Progressive Democrats. In the event the party nomination went to Mary Banotti, who lost to Mary McAleese in the election.
^"Gemma Hussey". ElectionsIreland.org. Archived from the original on 5 May 2007. Retrieved 24 November 2008.
^Murphy, Christina (15 February 1986). "Jubilant teachers see Hussey move as victory". The Irish Times. p. 8.
^McNamara,Maedhbh. A woman's place is in the Cabinet:women ministers in Irish governments 1919-2019. Drogheda, Sea Dog Books,2020.ISBN 978-1-913275-06-8
^Cooney, John (15 February 1986). "Taoiseach wanted Hussey in new Euro Ministry". The Irish Times. p. 1.
^Murphy, Meadhbh (4 March 2021). "International Women's Day 2021:Gemma Hussey". Retrieved 26 November 2024. Throughout her public and political life Gemma Hussey was a liberal and a feminist.