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Conall McDevitt

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Conall McDevitt
Member of the Legislative Assembly
forSouth Belfast
In office
21 May 2010 – 4 September 2013
Preceded byCarmel Hanna
Succeeded byFearghal McKinney
Personal details
Born(1972-06-01)1 June 1972(age 52)[1]
Dublin,Republic of Ireland
Political partySDLP(until 2013)
WebsiteOfficial website

Conall McDevitt(born 1972 in Dublin) is anIrish nationalist,and former member of the SDLP.[2]He also served as theSocial Democratic and Labour Party(SDLP) spokesman on Health, Social Services and Public safety and Policing,[3]and was appointed to the Policing Board in May 2011.[3]

Background[edit]

McDevitt became the National Secretary ofLabour Youth(Ireland) in 1993 and Vice President ofECOSY(European Community Organisation of Socialist Youth) in 1994.[3]He became the SDLP Director of Communications in November 1996 until December 1999, a time that included the negotiations leading to theGood Friday Agreementand first Assembly elections.[3]He left the SDLP to work as customer relations manager ofViridian GroupPLC,[citation needed]then owners ofNorthern Ireland Electricity.

Following the establishment of the power-sharingNorthern Ireland Executive,McDevitt served as Special Adviser to theMinister for Agriculture and Rural Development,Bríd Rodgers.He was involved in the attempts to resolve theDrumcree conflictand advised Rodgers during the2001 United Kingdom foot-and-mouth outbreak.

He was selected as the SDLP MLA forSouth Belfaston 9 December 2009 and succeededCarmel Hannain theNorthern Ireland Assemblyin early 2010.[4]

On 17 May 2012, McDevitt launched a consultation seeking views on a reduction in speed limits from 30 mph to 20 mph on designated unclassified roads.[5]

McDevitt said the SDLP was "100%" behind moves to permit same-sex marriage, but caused controversy by saying two veteran councillors would be disciplined over their opposition to it.[6]

In September 2013 he resigned from the Assembly after the revelation of three undeclared payments, amounting to £50,750 made up of £30,000[2]to JM Consulting for research support for his work as a member of the Northern Ireland Policing Board, £14,000 to JM Consulting[7]for research and secretarial services for his work as an MLA and £6,750[8]from his previous employer Weber Shandwick while sitting as an MLA. JM Consulting was owned at that time by McDevitt's wife Joanne Murphy.[9]

Three months after his resignation he joined the Irish lobbying firm Hume Brophy.[10]

Personal life[edit]

Born inDublin,Ireland,but brought up inMálaga,Andalusia,Spain,McDevitt was educated at the Instituto Bachillerato Mixto,Fuengirola.[citation needed]

References[edit]

  1. ^"MLA Details: Mr Conall McDevitt".Aims.niassembly.gov.uk.Retrieved11 May2021.
  2. ^abAgend NI"Transparency the McDevitt Case"Agenda NI, Retrieved 7 February 2017
  3. ^abcd"Conall McDevitt MLA | Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP)".Archived fromthe originalon 2 January 2013.Retrieved10 November2012.
  4. ^Jim Fitzpatrick"Stormont new faces bring fresh perspectives"BBC News
  5. ^McDevitt, Conall."20's plenty – Private Members Bill".SDLP.Retrieved7 March2013.
  6. ^McKeown, Lesley-Anne."SDLP spat over stance on same-sex marriages".Belfast Telegraph.Archived from the original on 27 March 2017.Retrieved7 February2023.{{cite news}}:CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  7. ^"Rising star Conall McDevitt quits politics after failing to declare payments",Irish Independent,Retrieved 7 February 2017
  8. ^"Conall McDevitt quits politics after serious breach of MLA code",Belfast TelegraphRetrieved 7 February 2017
  9. ^"Conall McDevitt from SDLP quits over payment",BBC News, Retrieved 7 February 2017
  10. ^"Hume Brophy Hires Politician who quit over Weber Shandwick Payments",PR Week, Retrieved 7 February 2017

External links[edit]

Northern Ireland Assembly
Preceded by MLAforSouth Belfast
2010–2013
Succeeded by