Emmet Stagg | |
---|---|
Stagg in 2014
|
|
Labour Party Chief Whip | |
In office May 2007 – March 2016 |
|
Leader |
Eamon Gilmore Joan Burton |
Teachta Dála | |
In office June 1997 – February 2016 |
|
Constituency | Kildare North |
In office February 1987 – June 1997 |
|
Constituency | Kildare |
Minister of State Department of Transport, Energy and Communications |
|
In office 1994–1997 |
|
Taoiseach | John Bruton |
Minister of State Housing and Urban Renewal |
|
In office 1993–1994 |
|
Taoiseach | Albert Reynolds |
Personal details | |
Born |
Hollymount, County Mayo, Ireland |
1 October 1944
Nationality | Irish |
Political party | Labour Party |
Spouse(s) | Mary Morris |
Children | 2 |
Alma mater | Kevin Street College of Technology, Dublin |
Emmet Stagg (born 1 October 1944) is an Irish Labour Party politician. He was a Teachta Dála (TD) for the Kildare North constituency and Labour Party Chief Whip.
Stagg was born at Hollymount, County Mayo and educated at Ballinrobe CBS school and Kevin Street College of Technology. Stagg worked as a Medical Technologist at Trinity College, Dublin before entering into full-time politics.
In 1979, he was elected to Kildare County Council for the Celbridge area, serving until 1993. He served again from 1999 until 2003. Stagg was first elected to Dáil Éireann at the 1987 general election for the Kildare constituency. Since then he has served as party Front Bench spokesperson on a number of areas, including Agriculture (1987–89) and Social Welfare (1989–92).
During the 1980s and early 1990s, Stagg was a prominent figure within the internal politics of the Labour Party, being viewed as one of the leaders of the left-wing faction along with Michael D. Higgins and Joe Higgins within the party opposed to coalition with Fine Gael, and as a prominent opponent of the then party leader Dick Spring. He had opposed the expulsion of Joe Higgins and Militant Tendency at the 1989 conference and in the early 1990s he considered leaving the party and joining the newly formed Democratic Left, though he ultimately chose to stay with the party. In the Fianna Fáil–Labour Party coalition government formed after the 1992 general election, he became Minister of State at the Department of the Environment, with special responsibility for Housing and Urban Renewal.