When I got home on Monday, the first thing I did was check my laptop for an email I needed to get to quite quickly. Of course I couldn’t get to my email without seeing my iGoogle homepage and the news headline just in from breakingnews.ie, “George Lee Resigns”.

It took me a few seconds to realise what the headline meant. Surely they didn’t mean the George Lee? Alas, the man heralded by many, including myself, as a hero railing against the political status quo ready to bring solid economic expertise to Dáil Éireann was prematurely ending what looked set to be a glittering political career.
The Irish Times told us that “he said the decision had been difficult, but that despite his best efforts, he had had virtually no influence on shaping Fine Gael’s economic policies.”
My first action was to say “Kenny needs to go”. How could he have mismanaged Lee so badly that this could happen? Lee’s candidature for the bye election had been a real coup for Kenny and Fine Gael. Now any poll boost from being having such a respected TD in their ranks will surely collapse. Intrigued by the story I spent much of the day, when I really should have been studying, listening to the many many media broadcasts that Lee partook of to explain his resignation.
The more I heard, however, the more my opinion changed.
I was at George Lee’s selection conference (though not a FG member in my utter delight at George running for the election I managed to tag along with a FG friend of mine) and was astounded by his speech. He spoke of “freedom” and how the goal of the government was to give the people freedom of opportunity, to give everyone the opportunity to live their lives to their full potential. He spoke of how he wanted to be able to tell his children that he did something to help us recover from the economic crisis. He struck me as genuine and committed to making his departure from RTE and into politics a success. His economic expertise had been enough to make me thrilled at the prospect that he might soon be one of my local TD’s, his speech made me even more so.
However after only nine months the dream was ended. George Lee’s political career was no more.
George Lee told us repeatedly that he had “virtually no influence or input” into Fine Gael’s economic policy but it later transpired that he had never expounded his economic ideas on paper. He had never contacted FG Finance Spokesperson Richard Bruton who told us on Newstalk that Lee had never even convened the Economic Committee he was given chairmanship of. A front bench position in the likely upcoming reshuffle was a given and in any case he was given much more opportunities than any other TD to put forward his agenda. At FG parliamentary party meetings and through his chairmanship of the economic committee he had the opportunity to influence policy. He simply did not.
The more I heard George Lee go on about how long a time nine months was and how he wanted change now, right now, the more angry I got with him. Back at his selection conference Dundrum Councillor Jim O’Leary had proposed Lee’s candidature. O’Leary had been Fine Gael’s third candidate and was Fine Gael’s presumptive nominee for the Dublin South bye election before George Lee was parachuted in. He stood aside to let Lee get the nomination unopposed. He forwent the opportunity to run so that George Lee could. O’Leary who has worked very hard since his 2004 election to Dun Laoghaire Rathdown county council would almost assuredly give and arm and a leg to have been sitting in the Dáil never mind say been given all the opportunities that George Lee was. Lee’s resignation was terrilbly disrespectful to the many politicians across the country who have worked a lot longer and harded than he did and continue to do so despite having much less opportunity to influence anything than George Lee did.
What also struck me was that there were some fundamental issues with George Lee’s attitude to his political career. In one case Fine Gael are probably happy enough that this happened when it did and not when George Lee was on the front bench or, heaven forbid, a cabinet minister where a tantrum from him could bring down the government!
As Vincent Browne exposed on Monday night, George Lee had never put the many policies that he was complaining FG weren’t interested in onto paper. He had never emailed Bruton or Kenny with his policy ideas, he seemed to expect them all to come running to him. This was a simply ludicrous expectation. George Lee is not the only economist in FG. Richard Bruton is an Oxford educated economist with much more experience both economically and politically than Lee. As a Paul Hickey wrote in a letter to the Irish Times “Fine Gael Senator Eugene Regan has vastly superior academic economic qualifications. Mr Lee’s former Fine Gael Oireachtas colleagues Joe McHugh TD, Kieran O’Donnell TD, and Senator Paschal Donohue are qualified economists. And his former colleagues Seán Barrett TD, Frank Feighan TD, and John Perry TD have vast practical understanding of commerce.” The idea that Fine Gael would be running to George Lee for policy advice was insane. TD’s, especially front benchers, do not have time to tend such egos. If he had advice he should have picked up a phone and told them.
If Enda Kenny can be credited with one things it is that he allows talent to prove itself and get onto Fine Gael’s front bench. One need only look at Leo Varadkar and James Reilly, both first terms TD’s given much less opportunites than Lee was, and the impact they have been able to make to see that Noel Whelan was right on Monday’s Frontline. George Lee “bottled it”.
Upcoming: Criticism of Enda Kenny’s proposed electoral reform & reaction to the Ukrainian election, will be up when I get some time from all this bloody studying! Thanks for reading.
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/letters/2010/0209/1224264028214.html
http://www.irishtimes.com/blogs/outsidein/2010/02/09/why-isnt-george-lee-a-hero/