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Charlie ditches wellies for Dáil 08.03.11

FIANNA Fáil's stock won't see a bull market for some time but the party's future could lie with a young breed of TD like livestock farmer, Charlie McConalogue.
Thirty-three year old McConalogue, from Inishowen will ditch his jeans and wellies for a sharp suit tomorrow, to take one of only 20 Fianna Fáil seats in the 31st Dáil.
The 6ft. 4in. farmer and local councillor has been busy trying to organise help running the family farm while he's in Leinster House during the week.
He has 40-head of Charolais cattle on a 70-acre holding at Carrowmore, Gleneely, near Carndonagh. As the eldest of six, he took over the farm following the death of his father, Willie Joe, five years ago and specialises in the suckler-to-beef market. He sells his animals through Carn Mart or directly to the meat factory in Carrigans. McConalogue intends being a "full-time politician" but will be hands-on at the farm whenever he has spare time back in his constituency. He clearly wouldn't say no if offered the role of Fianna Fáil agriculture spokesman.
Newly-elected Fianna Fáil TD., Charlie McConalogue feeds his Charolais cattle at the family farm in Gleneely with help from his lively collie-setter, Jess.
Meanwhile, he believes his party must reconnect with its grassroots including farmers.
“Farming as a sector wasn't given the recognition it deserved in recent years but I think it is coming back. It is an industry that has grown despite the international recession and I think that is going to continue. There is a good future for Irish farming.”
McConalogue, admits he was surprised to take one of the three seats in the Donegal North East constituency on February 26 given the punishment his party took nationwide. His election, on the ninth count, created the constituency of the ‘Three Macs’with Sinn Féin’s Pádraig MacLochlainn and Fine Gael’s Joe McHugh taking the other two seats.
McConalogue’s meteoric rise from county councillor to TD in 18 months, came after he and local supporters pressed party headquarters into a two-candidate strategy only for him to become the sole man standing following the shock withdrawal, at the eleventh hour, of sitting TD, Niall Blaney.
Supporters put his election down to him being perceived as far removed from the financier-courting set, as young, new and down-to-earth. He drives an eight-year old Ford Mondeo when he’s not in his ageing tractor.
"Fianna Fáil weren't as in touch with the membership as they should have been and did become detached and we paid the price for that in this past election." He now wants to help rebuild the party from the grassroots.
"In Donegal North East we are encouraging as many people as possible, in every parish and every townland, into the party to try and grow it here and make it a model for what needs to happen in other areas.
“That's what the party is going to have to do, to get back to a level where it is in government again, representing communities and giving people faith that it can do good for them."
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