Liadh Ni Riada is an Irish politician
@Irish Women, Career and Childhood
Liadh Ni Riada is an Irish politician
Liadh Ni Riada born at
At the age of 27, Liadh Ni Riada met her first husband, Fiachra Ó hAodha, 22 at the time, at a wedding in her home town of Cúil Aodha. They dated for two years and then got married in 1996.
Her husband, who was suffering from skin cancer, tragically passed away following a brain hemorrhage as a result of malignant melanoma just two months before their first wedding anniversary. Ni Riada, who had experienced the death of her parents at a very early age, told in an interview that the loss of her husband was more traumatic to her.
By the end of the century, she became involved with Nicky Forde, to whom she later got married in 2012. She and her husband live in Ballyvourney in the Muskerry Gaeltacht in County Cork with their three daughters, Cáit, Ailsa and Neans.
Liadh Ni Riada was born on November 28, 1966 in Dublin, Ireland, to legendary Irish composer and musician, Seán Ó Riada, who had singlehandedly revived Irish traditional music during the 1960s, and his wife. Youngest daughter of her parents, she lost her father at the age of four and her mother at the age of ten, and was raised in West Cork by her siblings.
By the time she was 15, she moved in with her aunt in Limerick and began studying music as part of her Leaving Certificate Examination, the final exam of the Irish secondary school system. After completing her school graduation, she took up a number of different jobs before entering the television industry.
In her early 20s, Liadh Ni Riada relocated to Dublin and began working in Raidió Teilifís Éireann (RTÉ), a semi-state company and the national public service broadcaster of Ireland. She continued to work on television for the next two decades, and eventually went on to establish her own production company, Red Shoe Productions.
During her time at RTÉ, she directed and produced several documentaries, including one on the then-minister for arts Michael D. Higgins and the Earth Summit in Brazil. A high point in her career came when Higgins put her on the board tasked with setting up the Irish language television channel TG4.
She has always been proud of her heritage and culture and is a staunch supporter of Irish language rights. After she became an independent producer, she often expressed her discontent with the quality of homegrown shows on RTÉ, which she thought was "missing originality and creativity" as they were modeled on BBC shows.
Liadh Ni Riada was inspired to join politics by her first husband Fiachra Ó hAodha, who "had a strong social conscience and a sense of injustice" and "always stood up for the underdog". Long after his death, she began her political journey by joining Sinn Féin as the party’s national Irish language officer in 2011.
In early September 2013, at a party convention, she was selected as Sinn Féin's Ireland South candidate for the 2014 European Parliament Election and began her campaign one week later. She grabbed the nomination by a tight margin of only two votes to defeat her opponent Chris O'Leary, national party executive member and Cork city Councilor.
Throughout her campaign in the following months, she promised to create new job positions, to put an end to forced emigration from Ireland, advocated for rural regeneration and raised awareness about increase in child poverty. In May 2014, she was elected as the first Sinn Féin MEP in Ireland South after securing 125,309 first preference votes, the second highest of all MEPs in Ireland.
Following the election, she became a member of three European Parliament committees: the Budgets Committee (BUDG), the Fisheries Committee (PECH), and the Substitute Culture and Education Committee (CULT). She was also a member of the European Parliament Delegation to the People's Republic of China.
Since being elected, she has continued to participate in the Budgets Committee’s activities as the coordinator for the GUE/NGL group on the committee. A critic of EU’s move towards militarization, she condemned its increased military spending and encouraged a more social approach towards the EU Budget.