She was born in Kinsale, County Cork, her father was a postman and part-time fisherman, who went blind when she was aged eleven,[2] her mother was the local seamstress. She was educated locally at the Convent of Mercy in Kinsale, where she was one of only two girls in her class to sit the Leaving Certificate examination.[2] Before entering politics she worked as a civil servant with the Department of Posts and Telegraphs.[2] She married Dan Desmond in 1955, a Labour TD for Cork from 1948 to 1964, and they had two daughters.[2]
She was elected to the European Parliament at the 1979 European Parliament election for the Munster constituency. However, her time in Europe was short-lived, as she returned to domestic politics when she was offered a position as Minister and the chance to impact national legislation. At the 1981 general election she switched her constituency to Cork South-Central. A Fine Gael–Labour Party coalition came to power and Desmond was appointed Minister for Health and for Social Welfare.
Desmond was the third woman to be appointed to cabinet since the foundation of the state in 1922, the first in a Fine Gael-Labour Party cabinet, and the first female officeholder of the health and social welfare ministries. Desmond was the only woman in that short-lived coalition Cabinet. She created the National Combat Poverty Agency, which addressed inequality. She achieved a 25% increase in social welfare allowance, a level never achieved before. However, the budget was defeated on 27 January 1982, leading to the dissolution of the 22nd Dáil, so the increases never came into effect.[2]
Desmond left politics in 1987 for health reasons but stood unsuccessfully in the 1989 European Parliament election after her health improved. She died in 2005.[2]
References
^"Eileen Desmond". Oireachtas Members Database. Archived from the original on 24 October 2020. Retrieved 30 December 2011.
McNamara, Maedhbh (2020). A Women's Place is in the Cabinet: Women Ministers in Irish Government 1919-2019. Drogheda (Ireland): Sea Dog Books. ISBN978-1-913275-06-8.