This data was produced from a variety of sources.
Gerald Nash TD, former Senator

- Labour TD for Louth
- Former Labour Senator (Labour Panel)
- Entered the Dáil on 26 February 2011 — General election
- Entered the Seanad on 25 April 2016 — General election
- Left the Seanad on 31 March 2020 — General election
- Email me whenever Gerald Nash speaks (no more than once per day)
Voting record
No data to display yet.
Committees and topics of interest
Asks most questions about
- Subjects (based on headings added by the Dáil record): Tax Data, Covid-19 Pandemic Supports, Covid-19 Pandemic, Departmental Advertising, Tax Code
(based on written questions asked by Gerald Nash and answered by departments)
Most recent appearances in parliament
- Transparency and Social Value in Public Procurement Bill 2024: Second Stage [Private Members] (26 Jun 2025)
“I congratulate my colleague Deputy Farrell for bringing this Bill forward. It is significant legislation. It very much aligns with the work that the Deputy has done since she entered this Chamber in 2020. She is very much focused on the question of public procurement and driving economic and social change through the development of responsible public procurement systems. It is quite...”
- Written Answers — Department of Finance: Sustainable Development Goals (26 Jun 2025)
“217. To ask the Minister for Finance the specific steps his Department is taking to integrate the Sustainable Development Goals into the preparation of Budget 2026; how alignment with the 2030 Agenda is being assessed during the budgetary process; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [35065/25]”
- Select Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure, Public Service Reform and Digitalisation, and Taoiseach: Estimates for Public Services 2025
Vote 11 - Public Expenditure, Infrastructure, Public Service Reform and Digitalisation (Revised)
Vote 12 - Superannuation and Retired Allowances (Revised)
Vote 14 - State Laboratory (Revised)
Vote 15 - Secret Service (Revised)
Vote 17 - Public Appointments Service (Revised)
Vote 18 - National Shared Services Office (Revised)
Vote 19 - Office of the Ombudsman (Revised)
Vote 39 - Office of Government Procurement (Revised)
Vote 43 - Office of the Government Chief Information Officer (Revised) (25 Jun 2025) “I have a couple of questions to ask in the limited time available. On Vote 18, the National Shared Services Office, I have some questions relating to the pensions deduction issue and how that matter has been handled. The Minister announced on 4 June that he had an update, having originally been informed of an issue in the NSSO and the discovery that there have been issues around pensions...”
Numerology
These statistics are updated only each weekend. Please note that numbers do not measure quality. Also, representatives may do other things not currently covered by this site.More about this)
- Has spoken in 63 committee discussions and Dáil debates in the last year — above average among TDs.
- Has spoken in 19 committee discussions and Dáil debates in the last year — below average among Senators.
- Has received answers to 323 written questions in the last year — above average among TDs.
- People have made 1 comment on this TD's speeches — above average among TDs.
- People have made 1 comment on this Senator's speeches — average among Senators.
- This TD's speeches, in the printed record, are readable by an average 17–18 year old, going by the Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level score.
- 21 people are tracking whenever this TD speaks — email me whenever Gerald Nash speaks.
- Has used three-word alliterative phrases (e.g. "public-private partnership") 532 times in debates — above average among TDs.
(Yes, this is a silly statistic. We include it to draw your attention to why you should read more than just these numbers when forming opinions.) - Has used three-word alliterative phrases (e.g. "public-private partnership") 206 times in debates — average among Senators.
(Yes, this is a silly statistic. We include it to draw your attention to why you should read more than just these numbers when forming opinions.)
Register of Members' Interests
Register last updated: 11 Mar 2015. More about the Register