-1.2 C
New York
Friday, December 5, 2025
HomeNewsSimon Harris becomes Ireland’s youngest leader

Simon Harris becomes Ireland’s youngest leader

Date:

Related stories

Mamta Singh makes history as first Indian-American elected to public office in Jersey City

Highlights: Mamta Singh becomes the first Indian American elected...

US enforces stricter visa rules with mandatory social media checks

Highlights: The US State Department has introduced stricter Visa...

US orders strict new screening for H-1B applicants as Trump administration expands speech-related reviews

Highlights: US consular officers must now examine LinkedIn profiles...

FBI lists Indian national as wanted in 2017 New Jersey double murder, seeks extradition from India

Highlights: FBI offers $50,000 reward for information leading to...

WHEN Simon Harris made headlines in his local County Wicklow newspaper in 2003 for criticising the government, the future Irish prime minister was described as “a well-known local activist”. He was 16 years old.

Now 37, Harris became Ireland’s youngest ever premier on Tuesday (9), an ascent that while swift owing to Leo Varadkar’s shock departure, has also been more than 20 years in the making, say those who have worked with the ambitious political devotee.

He quit university aged 20 to work as a political aide, was elected a councillor at 22, a member of parliament at 24 and appointed to cabinet five months shy of his 30th birthday, where he would make his name helping steer the country’s initial response to Covid-19.

His first boss, former Irish deputy prime minister Frances Fitzgerald, recalls being struck at just how keen her future cabinet colleague was to work in politics, something that was “unusual enough, even then” for a 20-year-old.

“What I thought was how very impressive he was, how very eager, energetic, intelligent and interested but most of all how he really wanted to work in the political system,” Fitzgerald, currently a member of the European parliament, told Reuters.

- Advertisement -

Harris has spoken about how he became involved in politics to campaign for support for his autistic younger brother Adam. He set up an autism awareness charity aged 15, calling it “the formative experience of my life”.

“I would say that’s what defines him, he does believe in politics and to this day, he believes in the political system as the place to be to get things done,” Fitzgerald said of her Fine Gael party colleague.

That description of a politician who works “all the hours of the day and night” was echoed by Niall Collins, a junior minister from coalition partners Fianna Fail, who has worked alongside Harris in the higher education ministry since 2020.

“His work ethic and attention to detail is enormous,” Collins told national broadcaster RTE on Sunday.

With less than a year to leave his mark in office before he must call a general election, Harris’ chief political challenge will be clawing back the more than three-year unbroken opinion poll lead the main opposition Sinn Fein party has on its rivals.

A recent slide in support for the left-wing party has opened up a possible path to re-election for another Fine Gael and Fianna Fail-led government. Polls suggest they may need the support of increasingly popular independent candidates, an arrangement the first government Harris was part of relied on in 2016.

(Reuters)

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories