This data was produced from a variety of sources.
Beverley Flynn, former TD
- Former Fianna Fail TD for Mayo
- Changed party from Independent on 3 Apr 2008; from Fianna Fail on 4 May 2005
- Left the Dáil on 25 February 2011 — did not stand for re-election
Voting record
No data to display yet.
Most recent appearances in parliament
- Written Answers — EU Directives: EU Directives (1 Feb 2011)
“Question 148: To ask the Tánaiste and Minister for Health and Children the position regarding the implementation of the EU Blood Directive; her views on the latest Commission report on the matter; the position proposed to a renewed definitive for principal of voluntary donations; and if she will make a statement on the matter. [4673/11]”
- Written Answers — Social Welfare Benefits: Social Welfare Benefits (1 Feb 2011)
“Question 195: To ask the Minister for Social Protection the reason a person (details supplied) in County Mayo was refused domiciliary care allowance. [4674/11]”
- Written Answers — Grant Payments: Grant Payments (25 Jan 2011)
“Question 457: To ask the Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Food the reason a person (details supplied) in County Mayo has not received their area aid based payments and REP scheme 4 payments for 2010. [3681/11]”
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 15 committee discussions and Dáil debates in the last year — below average among TDs.
- Has received answers to 29 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 16–17 year old, going by the Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level score.
- 9 people are tracking whenever this TD speaks.
- Has used three-word alliterative phrases (e.g. "public-private partnership") 90 times in debates — below 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.)