McDonald to replace Adams as Ireland’s Sinn Fein chief
DUBLIN: Mary Lou McDonald is set to become the president of Sinn Fein, replacing Gerry Adams who is stepping down after 34 years as the dominant figurehead of Irish republicanism.
McDonald, 48, the left-wing party’s deputy leader, was confirmed as the sole candidate to take over from Adams, 69, at a party meeting.
The change represents a major shift for Sinn Fein, so closely associatedwithAdams’leadership, which started in November 1983.
Sinn Fein’s president-elect will be confirmed in the position at a special party gathering on Feb 10.
“I know I have big shoes to fill taking on the role from Gerry Adams, and I know that is impossible. But I have brought my own shoes and together, with all of the party membership, we will walk on a journey that will lead to Irish unity. We are entering a new era and we can look forward with confidence,” McDonald said.
McDonald became a member of the European Parliament in 2004. She was appointed Sinn
I know I have big shoes to fill taking on the role from Gerry Adams, and I know that is impossible. But I have brought my own shoes and together, with all of the party membership, we will walk on a journey that will lead to Irish unity. We are entering a new era and we can look forward with confidence. Mary Lou McDonald, Sinn Fein deputy president
Fein’s deputy leader in 2009 and has represented central Dublin in the Irish parliament since 2011.
She is also the party’s public expenditure and reform spokeswoman in the Republic of Ireland.
McDonald presents a fresh face for the party and has no historic links to the Irish Republican Army (IRA), the now-defunct paramilitary wing of Sinn Fein responsible for more than 1,700 deaths during the conflict known as the Troubles in Northern Ireland.
Adams played a major role in convincing the IRA to disarm as part of the Northern Ireland peace process and masterminded Sinn Fein’s rise to become the secondbiggest political force north of the border and the third in the south. But many consider his past a millstone.
Sinn Fein, which wants Northern Ireland to leave the United Kingdom and become part of the Republic of Ireland, is the second-biggest party in the Belfast assembly and the third-biggest in the Dublin parliament.
“I want to see Sinn Fein in government north and south. But it will be government based on equality, government that respects the rights of citizens, that delivers prosperity and opportunity for all and reflects our republican ideals,” McDonald said.