*Photograph: Gary Collins
Ennis Municipal District will lose a seat and therefore a councillor following Mayโs local elections, Cllr Mary Howard is not in favour of the changes and feels the people of Clare need more female representatives on the Council.
Last month, Cllr Howard was selected alongside Cllr Paul Murphy and Cllr Johnny Flynn to represent Fine Gael in the Ennis MD for the 2019 local elections. She is frustrated that their MD will have one less seat as it could implicate the amount of work done in the town. โAt the end of the day Ennis is the county town. When you think back to this time five years ago we had 18 representatives working for the town of Ennis, you had the nine councillor and the nine town councillors, of that there was three that were both town and county but itโs a very busy space and there is a lot going on in Ennis, weโve a lot of community engagement which is great and I think we need to have more councillors representing the town of Ennisโ.
A full-time councillor, she struggled to see how some councillors can combine their role on the local authority with another full-time position. โI donโt know how anybody could do this job part time. For me it is a full time job whether thatโs because Iโve got involved with so many organisations I donโt know, I genuinely feel that in order to serve the town effectively youโve got to do it full timeโ.
First elected to Clare County Council in 2014, Mary has for the last four years spoke about her love of the job and that remains the case. โI am so involved in so many things within the community because I really love where we come from, I think we are very privileged to have a capital town like Ennis which is busy and thriving, we have a super county, you couldnโt want for anything in any other county in Ireland weโve got it all here in Clare. To be able to represent the people of the town and the county Iโm hugely proud to do that at any stage when asked to do it. Thereโs a huge amount of positive stuff and Iโm always inclined to beat the positive drum because people are very quick to stand up, complain and give out but there is a huge amount going on that people arenโt just awareโ.
Prior to being elected to the local authority, Howard was a member of Ennis Town Council. She told The Clare Echo that the abolition of the town councils is one less gateway for women to enter politics. At present, there are just three female elected officials on the Council, all of which are in Ennis. โThe town councils were a great place for women to be because for some reason they tended to gravitate towards that and we had great female representation on all the town councils. I think women have a huge amount to give, we have a different way of solving a problem, we look at it differently. We have great empathy for the people weโre dealing with and in fairness Council work youโre often dealing with people who are in crisis whether itโs a housing issue or debt. We need an awful lot more women, over half the population is female but women need to start supporting womenโ.
Four years ago, along with Cllr Clare Colleran Molloy, Mary received the lowest amount of first preference votes of the councillors elected. With local elections she feels there is a danger of candidates being deemed to be safe but pointed out that in the 2016 General Election, she received the most votes in Ennis town of all the female candidates.
โWith local elections, thereโs always this thing going out that such and such is safe and is strong, thatโs very dangerous talk and certainly it did come back to me in the last local elections that it was being put out about me that I was safe, youโre never safe and if anybody wants to vote for you they should vote for you as opposed to being strategic with their vote, if they think you deserve their vote and youโve worked hard enough and they feel or believe you are an effective councillor then absolutely they should give you their voteโ.
Two years ago, she contested both the General and Seanad elections but was unsuccessful in both. When asked if she would consider running for either again, Mary said, โI truly donโt know, I havenโt thought about it. They were tough elections, I gave everything that I possibly could to try have an impact however it wasnโt to beโ.
She added, โI donโt think you can plan like that in this job, I genuinely donโt think you can, a General Election can be called at any given time, I know the Fine Gael ticket has been confirmed for a number of months but you just never know, thatโs the nature of politics you just donโt know whatโs around the corner, everyday I enjoy the work and I donโt know what will be presented to me in the future or what opportunities Iโll have but I was never one to shy away, I was always willing what opportunity landed in front of meโ.