This data was produced from a variety of sources.
Senator Mark Daly

- Fianna Fail Senator (Administrative Panel)
- Entered the Seanad on 13 September 2007 — General election
- Email me whenever Mark Daly speaks (no more than once per day)
Most recent appearances in parliament
- Seanad: Gnó an tSeanaid - Business of Seanad (5 Nov 2025)
“I have received notice from the following Senators that they propose to raise the following matters: Senator Chris Andrews - the need for the Minister for Culture, Communications and Sport to make a statement on funding allocations to support the League of Ireland. Senator Shane Curley - the need for the Minister for Education and Youth to make a statement on providing additional time...”
- Seanad: Nithe i dtosach suíonna - Commencement Matters: Sports Funding (5 Nov 2025)
“Before I call on the Minister to reply, I welcome Scoil Chrónáin Naofa from Bray. You are most welcome to Seanad Éireann. I am delighted you could come. I do not know whether you heard about the unofficial role of Seanad Éireann, but there is no homework for the rest of the week when you visit Seanad Éireann. If the teachers do give you homework for the rest for...”
- Seanad: Nithe i dtosach suíonna - Commencement Matters: Sports Funding (5 Nov 2025)
“No, Ministers have to do their homework.”
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 240 committee discussions and Dáil debates in the last year — well above average among Senators.
- People have made 1 comment on this Senator's speeches — well above average among Senators.
- 37 people are tracking whenever this Senator speaks — email me whenever Mark Daly speaks.
- Has used three-word alliterative phrases (e.g. "public-private partnership") 1069 times in debates — well above 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.)