Edward Haughey, Baron Ballyedmond
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Dr. Edward Enda Haughey, Baron Ballyedmond, OBE (b. 5 January 1944) is a Northern Irish businessman and Irish politician.
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[edit] Biography
Haughey was educated by the Christian Brothers in Dundalk, County Louth. He married Mary Gordon Young in 1972, by whom he had two sons and a daughter.
Haughey emigrated to the United States for four years in the 1960s, but returned home and founded a veterinary pharmaceutical manufacturing business in 1968. He has been Chairman of Newry-based Norbrook Laboratories and Norbrook Holdings since 1980. Norbrook employs 1,300 people worldwide, 1,000 of them in Northern Ireland. He also started an air travel business principally Haughey Air, Carlisle Airport (sold to WA Developments in May 2006), and a helicopter charter company.
With an estimated personal wealth of £350m, Haughey is the 2nd richest person in Northern Ireland behind Seán Quinn and the 174th richest person in the United Kingdom. He owns Ballyedmond Castle in Rostrevor, County Down; and Corby Castle in Cumbria, England.
[edit] Politics
Haughey was nominated to the Irish Seanad Éireann by the then Taoiseach, Albert Reynolds in 1994, and nominated again by Bertie Ahern in 1997. He has been a member of the Forum for Peace and Reconciliation and the British-Irish Inter-Parliamentary Body since 1997. In 2004, Haughey was made a life peer as Baron Ballyedmond, of Mourne in the County of Down and sits in the House of Lords on behalf of the Ulster Unionist Party.
Haughey had previously been associated with both the Republic of Ireland's Fianna Fáil party and the British Conservative Party, to which he has donated several million pounds. Lord Ballyedmond is the second person to have sat in both the upper houses of the United Kingdom and post-1922 Ireland after:
- sixth Marquess of Lansdowne in 1927
- 3rd Earl of Iveagh - who sat in the Seanad in the 1970s as a nominee of Liam Cosgrave but was not active in the House of Lords despite being entitled to sit there
On 16 August 2006, Gardaí found an explosive device at a construction site for an estate Haughey was building in Co Louth. The bomb appeared to consist of fertilizer-type explosive material weighing approximately 70lb. The illegal splinter group, the Real IRA has been active in the area recently and is considered a likely suspect.
Haughey has served as an Honorary Consul to the Republic of Chile.
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Categories: 1944 births | Living people | Catholic Unionists | Irish businesspeople | Irish entrepreneurs | Irish politicians | Members of the 20th Seanad | Members of the 21st Seanad | People from County Louth | Northern Irish businesspeople | Northern Irish politicians | Northern Irish Roman Catholics | Life peers | Officers of the Order of the British Empire | Ulster Unionist Party politicians