Footnotes
1 Haughey systematically reviewed, repealed or amended Acts dating back 700 years in the single largest reform of the Irish civil and criminal code ever undertaken. Though a highly controversial politician, Haughey's reforms as Justice Minister (1961-1964) remain universally praised by supporters and opponents alike.
2 Both still exist, alongside a third since created, Dublin City University, formerly the National Institute of Higher Education (NIHE).
3 Sunday Independent.
4 Oxo is a top-selling Irish brand of stock cube.
5 Though posing as a very wealthy man, and living in a former viceregal summer residence on the outskirts of Dublin, Haughey was revealed in the Moriarty Tribunal to have been bankrolled by rich businessmen, who made multi-million pound donations to him to enable him to avoid bankruptcy.
6Of the nine presidential elections held before 1990 (1938, 1945, 1952, 1959, 1966, 1973, 1974, 1976, 1983) one candidate had been elected unopposed one five occasions (1938, 1952, 1974, 1976, 1983).
7 In the event, Haughey did face another leadership heave directly after the election requested by FitzGerald and granted by President Hillery. However efforts to replace Haughey by Desmond O'Malley as the Fianna Fail nominee for taoiseach failed.
8 Fergus Finlay, a senior aide to Labour leader Dick Spring, was telephoned by an anonymous source will details of the threat. (The source, challenged as to his trustworthyness, gave Finlay personal details that convinced Finlay as to his reliability.) According to Finlay, Haughey having told the Army Officer to "put me through to the President" and, on the basis of the President's earlier instructions being refused, told the army officer that he will be taoiseach one day and "when I am, I intend to roast your fucking arse if you don't put me through immediately." Finlay, Snakes and Ladders p.91. Haughey tearfully told the Dáil he never insulting an army officer and he never would. Lenihan in his subsequent account noted that no-one ever claimed Haughey had insulted an army officer but that he had threatened him, a subtle but important difference, and that Haughey never denied threatening the army officer, merely denied ever insulting an army officer.
Additional Reading
- Bruce Arnold, Jack Lynch, Hero in Crisis (Merlin, 2001) ISBN 1903582067
- James Downey, Lenihan: His Life and Loyalties (New Island Books 1998) ISBN 1874597979
- Fergus Finlay, Snakes and Ladders (New Island Books, 1998) 1874597766
- Joe Joyce and Peter Murtagh, The Boss: Charles J. Haughey in Government (Poolbeg, 1983) ISBN 0905169697
- Brian Lenihan, For the Record (Blackwater Press, ISBN 0861213629
- T. Ryle Dwyer, Nice Fellow: A Biography of Jack Lynch (Mercier, 2001) ISBN 18586353680
- T. Ryle Dwyer, ''Short Fellow: A Biography of Charles J. Haughey (Mercier, 1995) ISBN 1860231004
- T. Ryle Dwyer, Fallen Idol: Haughey's Controversial Career (Mercier 1997) ISBN 1856352021
- Raymond Smith, Haughey and O'Malley: The Quest for Power (Aherlow, 1986) ISBN 1870138007
- Dick Walsh, Inside Fianna Fáil (Gill & Macmillan, 1986) ISBN 0717114465
External links