South China Morning Post

Youngest PM pledges to lift party as elections near

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Simon Harris, Ireland’s youngest prime minister, will be hoping his social media skills and fresh face can save his Fine Gael party’s flagging fortunes as elections loom.

The 37-year-old, who the media has already dubbed the “TikTok Taoiseach” – the name for the Irish prime minister, pronounced “Tee-shock” – beats the previous record holder, his predecesso­r Leo Varadkar, who was 38 when he took the top job in 2017.

After Varadkar’s shock resignatio­n announceme­nt on March 20, Harris jumped into the race to lead his centre-right party and become prime minister by default.

He was selected to head Fine Gael shortly after in an unconteste­d coronation.

Harris told party members at the time that he would repay their faith with “hard work, with blood, sweat and tears, day in and day out with responsibi­lity, with humility and with civility”.

At a weekend conference, he followed up by pledging to re-energise and “reset” his party and steer it back towards “core values” like promoting business, farming, and law and order.

Harris’ selection on Tuesday as taoiseach when the Dail – the Irish parliament – returned from recess crowned a meteoric ascent.

Born in 1986, he grew up in the small coastal town of Greystones near Dublin, the son of a taxi driver.

He dropped out of a college course in journalism and French in Dublin after one year to concentrat­e on an already promising political career.

Harris entered politics by campaignin­g for services for his autistic younger brother, and later founded a charity.

He joined Fine Gael’s youth wing at the age of 16 and quickly rose through the party’s ranks.

A county councillor aged 22, he was elected to parliament as a 24-year-old in 2011 – at the time the youngest MP and titled “Baby of the Dail”.

He was appointed health minister in 2016, aged just 29.

Harris served as health minister for more than four years, including during the Covid pandemic – in which his communicat­ion skills were praised despite heavy criticism over nursing home deaths and occasional gaffes.

He said he could be an “awful old idiot at times”, after remarking that Covid-19 refers to 18 previous coronaviru­ses rather than the year it first occurred.

A father-of-two and married to a cardiac nurse, Harris’ prominence on social media, especially TikTok, has made him one of the most visible politician­s in Ireland.

He has been higher education minister since 2020.

With 1.4 million “likes” on TikTok, and hundreds of thousands of followers on both X and Instagram, Harris posts content almost daily to his audience.

For supporters, his enthusiasm could re-energise Fine Gael which still trails third in polls 10 weeks before local and European Parliament elections, and within a year of a general election.

 ?? Photo: AP ?? Simon Harris is applauded by fellow lawmakers in Dublin.
Photo: AP Simon Harris is applauded by fellow lawmakers in Dublin.

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