After Leo Varadkar resigned in March 2024, Harris was the only candidate in the 2024 Fine Gael leadership election. Appointed Taoiseach on 9 April 2024 at age 37, he became the youngest holder of the office in the state's history.[4] Due to his use of social media he has been dubbed the "TikTok Taoiseach".[5]
Early life
Harris was born in Greystones, County Wicklow, in 1986. He is the eldest of three children born to Bart, a taxi driver, and Mary Harris, a special needs assistant and Montessori teacher.[6][7][8] His sister was born on his third birthday, and his brother is eight years younger than him.[9] A grand-uncle of his was a Fine Gael councillor in Dún Laoghaire.[10]
Harris initially studied Valuation Surveying (AKA Property Economics) for a year (2004/5) before switching to Journalism and French both at Dublin Institute of Technology, and dropped out during 2005/2006 academic year to pursue a career in politics.[18][19]
Early political career
Harris began working as a parliamentary assistant to his future cabinet colleague Frances Fitzgerald in 2008, when she was a member of Seanad Éireann.[13] At the 2009 local elections, Harris was elected to Wicklow County Council,[20] with the highest percentage vote of any county councillor in Ireland,[13] and to Greystones Town Council.[3] As a councillor, he served as chairperson of the County Wicklow Joint Policing Committee and Chairperson of the HSE Regional Health Forum.[21] He was a member of Wicklow County Council's Housing Strategic Policy Committee[21] and Wicklow Vocational Educational Committee.[21]
Harris was elected to Dáil Éireann in 2011, taking the third seat in the Wicklow constituency.[20] As the youngest deputy in the 31st Dáil, he was selected by Fine Gael to nominate Enda Kenny for Taoiseach, making his maiden speech.[22] Harris served on the Dáil Public Accounts Committee (PAC) and the Joint Oireachtas Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure, and Reform.[23][24] He was also a member of the Oireachtas cross-party group on Mental Health, and introduced the Mental Health (Anti-Discrimination) Bill 2013, in June 2013.[25]
During a period of intense flooding throughout the country during the winter of 2015 and 2016, Harris was forced to deny accusations that the government had left €13m in the budget for flood relief works in 2015 unspent, while he had also secured funding for flood defences in his own constituency.[28]
Minister for Health
On 6 May 2016, Harris was appointed to the cabinet as Minister for Health.[29][30] In his first year in the job, Harris faced the possibility of 30,000 health workers and 40,000 nurses going on strike.[31] The planned strikes were later called off.[32]
In 2016, Harris contributed to the "A Healthy Weight for Ireland – Obesity Policy and Action Plan 2016–2025", a policy outlining "the Government's desire to assist its people to achieve better health, and in particular to reduce the levels of overweight and obesity", in which Harris claims that "the approach taken in developing this policy was based on the Government framework for improved health and wellbeing of Ireland".[33]
In 2017, Harris was accused of "practising hypocrisy" over his stance on the Sisters of Charity's ownership of the National Maternity Hospital.[34] The controversy saw the resignations of Peter Boylan and Chris Fitzpatrick from the board of the hospital.[35][36] The Religious Sisters of Charity later relinquished ownership of three hospitals: St. Vincent's University Hospital in Dublin, St. Vincent's Private, and St. Michael's. Harris was re-appointed when Leo Varadkar succeeded Kenny as Taoiseach in June 2017.[37]
On 26 April 2018, the HSE confirmed that 206 women developed cervical cancer after having a screening test which was subsequently deemed to be potentially inaccurate on lookback, once a woman presented with a confirmed diagnosis of Cervical Cancer and given the known limitations of screening using smear technology.[41] In the resulting scandal, Harris was criticised for his handling of the matter on multiple occasions.[42][43][44][45][46]
In 2018, Harris intervened in the case of an 8-year-old Chinese boy who had been born in Dublin but was facing deportation. After an appeal to the Department of Justice, the boy was permitted to remain in Ireland.[8]
Motion of no confidence
On 20 February 2019, Harris survived a motion of no-confidence over his handling of the rising costs (over €2 billion) of the new National Children's Hospital.[47][48] The motion was voted down by 58 votes to 53 with 37 abstentions.[49][50][51]
Harris was the Fine Gael Director of Elections for councillor James Geoghegan's campaign in the 2021 Dublin Bay South by-election.[57] Following Leo Varadkar's appointment as Taoiseach on 17 December 2022, he was re-appointed to the same position, as well as Minister for Justice on a temporary basis during the maternity leave of Helen McEntee.[58]
Taoiseach (2024–present)
Fine Gael leader
Leo Varadkar resigned as leader of Fine Gael on 20 March 2024, triggering a leadership election. Varadkar indicated that he would also resign as Taoiseach upon the election of the new Fine Gael leader. Nominations opened at 10 a.m. on 21 March 2024. By that afternoon, more than half of the Fine Gael parliamentary party had announced their support for Harris to be the next leader and all other cabinet ministers had ruled themselves out of the contest. Harris confirmed his intention to run for Fine Gael leader on the evening of 21 March 2024 on the Six One News.[59] When the deadline for nominations was reached on 24 March 2024, Harris was the only candidate, and he was confirmed as leader at the party's meeting in Athlone the same day.[60][61] Both other government parties have indicated that they wish the government to run its full term notwithstanding the change of leadership.[62][63] Varadkar tendered his resignation as Taoiseach to the President on 8 April.[64] The Dáil reconvened after the Easter recess on 9 April, when Harris was forwarded for the nomination of Taoiseach.[65]
Entering government
Following the resignation of Varadkar as Taoiseach on 8 April, Harris was nominated by the Dáil as Taoiseach on 9 April 2024, by a vote of 88 to 69. He received his appointment as Taoiseach by President Michael D. Higgins shortly afterwards as the youngest in the history of the state.[66] Accepting the nomination of the Dáil, he paid tribute to his predecessor and acknowledged his status as the youngest elected officeholder, promising to be a "Taoiseach for all".[67]
Harris condemned the 2023 Hamas-led attack on Israel.[69] He also criticised Israel's military operations in the Gaza Strip, saying "It's not about being pro-Israeli or pro-Palestinian. It's about being pro-international law. It's been about pro-human rights. It's been pro-peace. And I think what's happening in Gaza is unconscionable."[69] Calling for a ceasefire in the Israel–Hamas war, Harris said: "40,000 dead in Gaza is a milestone the world must be ashamed of. International diplomacy has failed to protect innocent children, some only days old."[70] Ireland announced the recognition of a Palestinian state on 28 May 2024, a move he described as "important and historic".[71]
In April 2024, Harris said that Ireland would not provide a "loophole" for other countries' immigration issues. This followed an increase in migration of asylum seekers from the United Kingdom to Ireland via the Irish border, due to the Rwanda asylum plan.[72] Harris dismissed British newspaper speculation that Ireland would join the Rwanda scheme, maintaining that Ireland would have its own immigration policy.[73] In September 2024, Harris defended his statements linking homelessness and migration, by saying that the most common source of homelessness in Dublin was leaving direct provision.[74]
General election
On 8 November 2024, after returning from an European Council meeting in Hungary, Harris sought a dissolution of the 33rd Dáil, which was granted by President Michael D. Higgins, and scheduled a general election for 29 November. In a speech at Government Buildings, Harris said "the time is now right to ask the Irish people to give a new mandate" and "if you give me your trust, I will give you my all".[75]
On 22 November, during the final weekend of the campaign, Simon Harris walked away from an emotional exchange with Charlotte Fallon, a carer from St Joseph's Foundation, in Kanturk, County Cork. Fallon, a worker in a section 39 disability organisation, accused the government of neglecting carers and people with disabilities. Harris dismissed her claims, leading to a tense exchange and his abrupt departure after she called him "not a good man". The incident, captured on video by RTÉ News, drew criticism from activists and opposition politicians who condemned Harris for his dismissive response. Fallon later said she felt "shaken" and upset. Harris rang her the following morning to apologise, admitting he had been "harsh" and should have given her more time. Fine Gael deputy leader Helen McEntee defended Harris, citing the long day of campaigning.[76][77]
Harris was re-elected to the Dáil on the first count.[78] He resigned as Taoiseach on 18 December, on the morning of first meeting of the 34th Dáil. He and the other members of the government will continue to carry out their duties until the appointment of their successors.[79]
Personal life
In 2017, Harris married Caoimhe Wade, a cardiac nurse. They married at St Patrick's Church in Kilquade.[80] They have a daughter and a son.[9] Harris lives with Crohn's disease,[81] but has said it has little impact on his day-to-day life.[82]
Harris is the eldest of three siblings.[83] His brother is autistic and runs the autism services charity AsIAm, which Simon Harris co-founded.[84]
Harris is noted for his social media presence, especially on TikTok, having been nicknamed the "TikTok Taoiseach".[85][86] He used Instagram for live streams while Minister of Health during the COVID-19 pandemic, which was cited by the Irish Examiner as a rare occasion in which a government minister took questions from the general public.[87][88]