Caitríona Ruane

Caitríona Ruane MLA
Minister of Education
In office
8 May 2007 – 5 May 2011
Preceded by Martin McGuinness
Succeeded by John O'Dowd
Member of the Northern Ireland Assembly
for Down South
Incumbent
Assumed office
26 November 2003
Preceded by Mick Murphy
Personal details
Born 19 July 1962 (1962-07-19) (age 49)
Swinford, County Mayo, Ireland
Political party Sinn Féin
Website SF election page

Caitríona Ruane MLA (born 1962 in Swinford, County Mayo) is a Sinn Féin politician and a member of the Northern Ireland Assembly for South Down.[1][2]

In the first Executive under First Minister Ian Paisley and deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness she was appointed Minister of Education. She has faced opposition over the scrapping of the Transfer Examination (Eleven Plus) and her subsequent plans for a replacement. She was replaced by John O'Dowd after the 2011 election.

Contents

History

Ruane is a former professional tennis player who represented Ireland in the Fed Cup. She now lives in Carlingford, County Louth and is married with two children.[3] In the past Ruane has acted as director of the Féile an Phobail and chairperson of the St Patrick's Carnival Committee in Belfast.[4]

"Bring them Home" campaign

Ruane was a prominent member of the Bring Them Home campaign for the Colombia Three, which sought the safe return of three Irishmen later convicted in their absence in Colombia of training FARC insurgents.[5]

Abolition of the Eleven Plus

Ruane has faced opposition for her support for abolition of the Eleven Plus examination, originally planned by her predecessor Martin McGuinness.[6] She has faced opposition from the Democratic Unionist Party [7] and Social Democratic and Labour Party[8] as well as from grammar schools in Northern Ireland, causing them to form the AQE[9] (Association for Quality Education), which will offer a replacement for the transfer examination, with 30 grammar schools signed up to the plan.[10] She was alleged to have delayed the publication of a report which showed that public opinion favoured academic selection.[11]

In March 2011, Ruane caused controversy by claiming that all Northern Irish pupils should be given the opportunity to study Irish, that Northern Ireland's education system should be made more similar to that of the Republic of Ireland, and that “the debate on academic selection is now over”.[12] Director of the Governing Bodies Association, which represents Ulster grammar schools, John Hart, said, “I think the minister is fooling only herself in trying to convince us that the debate surrounding academic selection is over. Some 26,000 parents last year did not think it was over. As we have said in the past, the minister washed her hands of responsibility for academic selection, so she would be better letting those with a more responsible approach get on with it, instead of petty badgering."[13]

See also

References

Northern Ireland Assembly
Preceded by
Mick Murphy
MLA for Down South
2003 -
Succeeded by
Incumbent
Political offices
Preceded by
Office suspended
Minister of Education
2007 - 2011
Succeeded by
John O'Dowd