Originally becoming involved in politics through campaigns against high local service charges in Leixlip, she joined the Workers' Party in 1983. She first held political office in 1988, when she was elected to Leixlip Town Commission. She stood unsuccessfully as a Workers' Party candidate for the Leinster constituency at the 1989 European Parliament election and for the Kildare constituency at the 1989 general election.[2]
She opposed Democratic Left's merger with the Labour Party in 1998, criticising the party as "highly opportunistic". She also stated that she would refuse to join a merged entity.[3] However, in the 1999 local elections, she was re-elected to Kildare County Council, this time for the Leixlip local electoral area representing the Labour Party, she also won a seat on Leixlip Town Council.
Independent politician
She resigned from the Labour Party in June 2003, citing what she termed "destructive internal intrigues".[4] She stood as an independent at the 2004 local elections and was re-elected to both council seats, topping the poll.[2]
Charlie McCreevy, the Fianna Fáil TD for Kildare North, resigned from the Dáil in November 2004, when he was appointed as a European Commissioner. Murphy contested the resulting by-election in March 2005 as an independent candidate, and won the seat. On a low turnout, she polled slightly fewer first-preference votes than Fianna Fáil's Áine Brady, but was elected on the fifth count. Her by-election campaign had the backing of several other prominent independent TDs such as Tony Gregory and Marian Harkin.[5] Murphy's campaign was based on such issues as transport, local government, affordable housing and education, and after her victory she promised to be a "thorn in the side" of the government.[6]
At the 2007 general election, she lost her seat to her by-election opponent Áine Brady. Brady was elected on the first count; Murphy held on until the last, when Fine Gael's Bernard Durkan reached the quota by transfers from his eliminated running mate.[7] In July 2008, she regained the council seat she had formerly held before her election as a TD (due to the dual mandate) when the councillor that replaced her, Gerry McDonagh, resigned his seat.
She was re-elected to the council at the 2009 local elections, topping the poll with over 2,000 more votes than the quota. She was also re-elected to Leixlip Town Council.
On 20 September 2011, Murphy confirmed she had signed papers nominating Senator David Norris as a candidate at the 2011 presidential election, she said, "to ensure that [Senator David Norris] can be judged not by fellow politicians but by the people of Ireland."[9]
She was critical of the household charge, describing it as a "fundamentally unfair" one.[10]
Denis O'Brien controversy
On 27 May 2015, Murphy attempted to raise issue in the Dáil the issue of billionaire Denis O'Brien receiving an injunction barring the media from revealing details of his request that the liquidator of the Irish Bank Resolution Corporation continue favourable terms O'Brien had received from the bank.[11][12]Ceann ComhairleSeán Barrett ruled her contributions "out of order".[13] Murphy attempted to raise the matter again the following day, this time with more success.[14]
Lawyers acting for O'Brien immediately forced the country's media to censor its own coverage, with some media outlets confirming they had received warnings from O'Brien's lawyers.[15] RTÉ reporter Philip Boucher-Hayes tweeted that Drivetime would play Murphy's speech; in the event, Murphy's speech was not broadcast and his tweet was later deleted.[11]Tonight with Vincent Browne (with Browne absent and instead moderated by Ger Colleran, editor of INM's Irish Daily Star) featured Colleran reading a statement from TV3 management asserting that no discussion about Murphy's comments would be allowed following letters from O'Brien's lawyers.[11] Foreign commentators covering these events for the international media suggested Irish democracy had been "wiped away at a stroke".[16]
On 22 February 2023, Murphy and Shortall announced that they would step down as co-leaders of the Social Democrats.[18] They were succeeded by Holly Cairns on 1 March.[19] On 2 July 2024, she and Shortall both announced that they would not contest the next general election.[20]
References
^"Catherine Murphy". Oireachtas Members Database. Archived from the original on 10 April 2019. Retrieved 4 January 2008.
^ abc"Catherine Murphy". ElectionsIreland.org. Archived from the original on 30 March 2019. Retrieved 4 January 2008.
^Kevin, Rafter (2011). Democratic Left: The Life and Death of and Irish Political Party. Irish Academic Press. p. 314. ISBN978-0-7165-3111-1.