This data was produced from a variety of sources.

RSS feed Michael Ahern, former TD

Photo of Michael Ahern
  • Former Fianna Fail TD for Cork East
  • Left the Dáil on 25 February 2011 — General election (stood again)

Voting record

No data to display yet.

RSS feed Most recent appearances in parliament

Bretton Woods Agreements (Amendment) Bill 2011: Second Stage (19 Jan 2011)

“Many people ask me what the Bretton Woods system is about. It took its name - like the Maastricht treaty, for example - from the location in which the agreement was reached, in the United States in 1944. Its aim was to rebuild the international economic system and, to that end, it established a system of rules, institutions and procedure to regulate the international monetary system. It...”

Bretton Woods Agreements (Amendment) Bill 2011: Second Stage (19 Jan 2011)

“They tell us that they are one party, North and South, in the whole 32 counties, but they seem to be acting in two different ways. Sinn Féin should tell us the truth about where they will get the money and what their real policies are. I commend the Bill to the House.”

Bretton Woods Agreements (Amendment) Bill 2011: Second Stage (19 Jan 2011)

“It is Doherty.”

More of Michael Ahern's recent appearances

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 20 committee discussions and Dáil debates in the last year — below average among TDs.
  • Has received answers to 10 written questions in the last year — below average among TDs.
  • People have made 0 comments on this TD's speeches — average among TDs.
  • This TD's speeches, in the printed record, are readable by an average 19–20 year old, going by the Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level score.
  • 8 people are tracking whenever this TD speaks.
  • Has used three-word alliterative phrases (e.g. "public-private partnership") 132 times in debates — 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.)