Emer Higgins | |
---|---|
Minister of State | |
2024– | Enterprise, Trade and Employment |
Teachta Dála | |
Assumed office February 2020 | |
Constituency | Dublin Mid-West |
Personal details | |
Born | 1985 or 1986 (age 38–39) Dublin, Ireland |
Political party | Fine Gael |
Alma mater | University College Dublin |
Emer Higgins (born 1985/1986)[1] is an Irish Fine Gael politician who has been a Teachta Dála (TD) for the Dublin Mid-West constituency since the 2020 general election.[2][3]
She was co-opted as a member of South Dublin County Council in 2011 and continued as a councillor until her election as a TD in 2020, and worked as chief of staff of global operations for PayPal. She served as Leader of the Fine Gael group on South Dublin County Council and as Chair of the Land use, Planning and Transport SPC Strategic Policy Committee.
In 2019, she ran as the Fine Gael candidate in the 2019 Dublin Mid-West by-election where she was beaten by the Sinn Féin candidate Mark Ward.[4]
She is a member of the Governing Authority of University College Dublin (UCD), where she went to college and graduated with a Honours Degree in Economics and Sociology.[3] She also worked for a period of five years as an assistant to Frances Fitzgerald.[5]
In November 2019, she apologised for an incident in 2014, in which she delivered a letter to her constituents where she expressed "delight" over cancelled plans for accommodation for Irish Travellers in Newcastle, South Dublin.[6]
At the 2020 general election, she was one of two Fine Gael candidates in Dublin Mid-West and was elected to one of four seats in the constituency.[7][8] Following Higgins's election to the Dáil, Shirley O'Hara was co-opted to her seat on South Dublin County Council.[9]
In May 2022, Higgins was widely criticised on social media for her "months-long campaign" and work with Simon Coveney to rename An Post's Passport Express service as Post Passport, as it was not quick enough. Critics described her video announcing the change as "tone deaf" and asked whether there were not more important issues for elected representatives to deal with. As a result she was ratioed on Twitter.[10]
On 17 December 2022, Higgins seconded the uncontested nomination of Leo Varadkar as Taoiseach for his second term.[11]
On 10 April 2024, Higgins was appointed as Minister of State at the Department of Enterprise, Trade and Employment with responsibility for Business, Employment and Retail.[12][13]
On 30 June 2024, Higgins announced that she would be asking Dublin City Council to pause the Dublin City Centre Transport Plan. The move followed public criticism of the plan by Ibec and the Dublin City Traders Alliance but faced criticism from Minister for Transport Eamon Ryan and from several Dublin City councillors as well as advocacy groups I BIKE Dublin and the Dublin Commuter Coalition.[14][15] Her intervention was described by some councillors as "inappropriate", an "outrageous overreach" and an instance "of big business dictating to the city",[16] and by Ivana Bacik, the leader of the Labour Party as "a really inappropriate intervention by a junior minister seeking it seems to derail the traffic plan agreed for Dublin City Council by councillors”.[17][18]