O'Reilly describes herself as being "born a RepublicanSocialist" because of her families' involvement in trade unionism. Her grandfather was a shop steward for the Irish Transport and General Workers' Union while her grandmother was one for the Irish Women Workers' Union. Her father Mick O’Reilly was a trade union official as well, and was a member of the Connolly Youth Movement, the youth wing of the Communist Party of Ireland, before joining the Labour Party, to which the union he worked for was affiliated.[3][4]
O'Reilly herself worked as an organiser with the SIPTU trade union for a decade before her entrance into politics.[5][6]
Political career
O'Reilly was selected as the Sinn Féin candidate for Dublin Fingal in March 2015 in preparation for the 2016 Irish general election.[7] In that election O'Reilly was successful on the 10th count. The Phoenix suggests that Sinn Féin had deliberately placed O'Reilly in Dublin Fingal rather than Dublin South-Central (containing Crumlin, where she lived at the time) believing she could successfully displace Dr James Reilly of Fine Gael. Reilly's run as Health Minister was considered to be stalling while O'Reilly was believed to be strong on health due to her previous experience as a trade union official representing nurses and doctors. O'Reilly did, in fact, go on to pip Dr Reilly for the seat.[4] Her opponents accused her of being "parachuted" into the constituency, and it was only after she was elected that she moved from Crumlin to Skerries to reside in the constituency she represented.[8][9]
She was appointed Sinn Féin's spokesperson on Enterprise, Trade and Employment on 2 July 2020.[12] She was previously the party's Health spokesperson.[13]
References
^"Louise O'Reilly". Oireachtas Members Database. Archived from the original on 12 July 2019. Retrieved 12 July 2019.
^"Louise O'Reilly". ElectionsIreland.org. Archived from the original on 22 December 2017. Retrieved 12 July 2019.