Eamonn Kissane (died 20 May 1979) was an
Irish teacher, barrister and
Fianna Fáil politician, who served as a
Teachta Dála (TD) for 19 years and then as a
senator for 14 years.
Career
Kissane was first elected to
Dáil Éireann as TD for
Kerry at the
1932 general election which began sixteen years of unbroken rule for
Éamon de Valera's Fianna Fáil. In the last months of the
10th Dáil, Kissane got his first promotion, as
Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Lands, from February to June 1943. After Fianna Fáil's victory in the
1944 general election, Kissane was appointed as
Parliamentary Secretary to the Taoiseach (the government
chief whip) and as
Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Defence. He served in that position until when Fianna Fáil was defeated at the
1948 general election, when the
First Inter-Party Government took office.
Fianna Fáil won the
1951 general election, but Kissane lost his own Dáil seat in
Kerry North. He stood again in Kerry North at the
1954 general election, but was not successful.
After his defeat in 1951, Kissane was
nominated by the Taoiseach to the
7th Seanad, and in 1954 he was elected by the
Cultural and Educational Panel to the
8th Seanad. The panel returned him to the next two Seanads, but he did not contest the 1965 election to the
11th Seanad, and retired from politics.
References
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