This data was produced from a variety of sources.
Senator Ned O'Sullivan
- Fianna Fail Senator (Labour Panel)
- Entered the Seanad on 13 September 2007 — General election
- Email me whenever Ned O'Sullivan speaks (no more than once per day)
Most recent appearances in parliament
- Seanad: Research and Innovation Bill 2024: Committee Stage (Resumed) (15 May 2024)
“Next Tuesday.”
- Joint Committee On Children, Equality, Disability, Integration And Youth: Ireland's International Obligations under the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child: Discussion (23 Apr 2024)
“First, I extend a very warm welcome to our guests, both adults and young people. It is wonderful to meet them. We do a lot of talking here about children and children's things, and it is nice to be talking to the end users - I suppose you could put it that way - and the people who are at the coalface. It is great that they are engaged and prepared to give their time to this very valuable...”
- Joint Committee On Children, Equality, Disability, Integration And Youth: Ireland's International Obligations under the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child: Discussion (23 Apr 2024)
“I asked about the ages of people involved in the report. I know some of the people involved are under 18. What was the lowest age?”
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 23 committee discussions and Dáil debates in the last year — well below average among Senators.
- People have made 8 comments on this Senator's speeches — well above average among Senators.
- 29 people are tracking whenever this Senator speaks — email me whenever Ned O'Sullivan speaks.
- Has used three-word alliterative phrases (e.g. "public-private partnership") 363 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.)