Mary Hanafin says she has faith in Micheal Martin

Former minister defied party headquarters and ran after being instructed not to compete

Former minister Mary Hanafin has said she has faith in Fianna Fáil leader Micheál Martin and believes he is "doing a tremendous job" even though he asked her not to contest the local elections.

Ms Hanafin is on course to win a local election seat in the Blackrock electoral area of Dun Laoghaire-Rathdown alongside her running mate Kate Feeney.

Fianna Fáil approached Ms Hanafin about running alongside Ms Feeney but then decided she should not compete. Ms Hanafin had received her nomination papers and refused to step aside.

Asked if it had been a difficult few weeks, Ms Hanafin said: “Once I was on the ballot paper and once we got over the initial difficulties, the campaign itself was a pleasure”.

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Asked about the prospect of disciplinary action for failing to withdraw when asked, she said: “I know the national executive will want to do what they want to do but at the end of the day they showed me evidence that said if I ran as a candidate we could win two seats. You can’t win two seats if you only have one candidate.”

She said she did not feel resentment towards Fianna Fáil or Mr Martin.

“I’m obviously personally pleased and pleased for my family that we did stand our grand. It was more for my own credibility as a person, as a woman and as a candidate that i would continue having been asked to do this and it has had the right result for both Kate Feeney and myself.”

Speaking to reporters at the CityWest count centre, she said: "I have always been a loyal member of Fianna Fail...I heard Micheal Martin say there were things that could be handled differently and it is water under the bridge".

She added: "I have great faith in Michael Martin. He has done a tremendous job in the last couple of years in building up the party and we do now need to concentrate on the Dublin area and I would like to be part of that recovery as one of the councillors for Dublin, particularly with women in the capital."

Despite not being recognised by the party as an official candidate, Ms Hanafin said she used the Fianna Fáil leaflet and poster during the campaign and put Ms Feeney’s “name on everything and looked for number twos for her”.

“There might have been difficulty at the beginning about the nomination but once we got into the campaign and certainly the election it was very much about Fianna Fáil.”

She said she was glad she looked to have helped Fianna Fáil take two seats and 27 per cent of the vote in Blackrock, which she described as a significant increase. Asked if she would consider running for the Dáil again, Ms Hanafin said she had “one priority and one mandate”.

She had always kept the door open to a return to politics but “I didn’t quite expect it was going to be so quick but I’m delighted to take this opportunity now.”

Asked if her return was a sign of the old Fianna Fáil guard that landed the State in the bailout returning, she said.

“I was a member of the last government and last cabinet and I think the people of Blackrock have now shown that they have faith in me personally and my ability to represent them and I think having a new electoral mandate will be a help in that.”

“I will not be taking any income or allowance from the council.”

Steven Carroll

Steven Carroll

Steven Carroll is an Assistant News Editor with The Irish Times