Conor McGregor not fit to hold office, says presidential candidate Catherine Connolly
Presidential candidate Catherine Connolly also argued for extending the right to vote in presidential elections to Northern Ireland. Picture: Gareth Chaney
Independent presidential candidate Catherine Connolly has sharply criticised Conor McGregorâs bid for the presidency, saying the former MMA fighter is not be fit to hold the office.
In an interview with the, Ms Connolly outlined her opposition to Mr McGregor's presidential bid.
âI donât think any woman would think that man is fit to be anything, given his history and his record,â Ms Connolly said.
Her comments come as Mr McGregor has formally sought to appear before Dublin City Council to seek a nomination for the presidency.
Mr McGregor is due to appear before a meeting of the council on September 15, when they hold a special meeting to interrogate candidates.

Ms Connolly said that while she does not believe Mr McGregor is fit for the office, there should be a discussion on changing the nomination process for the presidency, but added that her âinstinctive conservative reactionâ is to leave the process as is, with the requirement for either 20 Oireachtas nominations or the backing of four councils.
She also argued for extending the right to vote in presidential elections to Northern Ireland, but was more cautious about extending the franchise to individuals living abroad.
âI think there should be a discussion, a rational discussion, around how we could extend the franchise, but there are consequences and implications for that.â
She acknowledged that it is âmost unfairâ on individuals who are out of the country for a short period of time to lose their vote.
On her own plans for the presidency, Ms Connolly said one of her first foreign visits would be to Palestine to âstand in solidarity with the peopleâ.
She believes the world is at a âvery dangerous crossroadsâ, as large countries, such as the US and Russia, edge back towards being âempiresâ.
Ms Connolly strongly criticised the Government for its move to dismantle the triple lock for deploying Irish troops abroad.
âWe as a nation have always respected and honoured the UN. That we should be part of the dismantling of it is absolutely appalling and unacceptable for me,â Ms Connolly said.
Ms Connolly is critical of all countries who have used the UN Security Council veto, but said Ireland primarily would call out Russia for its veto usage, under her presidency.
âIf weâre talking about credibility as a country, then we need to call out all powers that misuse their veto.
âRussia was the enemy and America was our ally. Itâs more difficult to keep that binary distinction now because itâs so blatant that theyâre [the US] using their veto stop the peacekeeping force [in Lebanon],â Ms Connolly said.
She said debates in the DĂĄil should be on how to face up to the bullies that are the US and Russia.
Questioned if she believed the US, under Donald Trump, was an ally of Ireland, Ms Connolly did not answer directly but described the country as a âcolonising empireâ.
âThe language has been reduced to âyouâre for us, or youâre against usâ, which is dangerous and worrying and will not help democracy.Â
"Weâre back to siding with empires and thatâs why we need Ireland to use its voice,â Ms Connolly said.

Ms Connolly also criticised the use of a âcoalition of the willingâ â to facilitate peace negotiation attempts to end the war in Ukraine â by European states.
âWeâre back to language like the "coalition of the willing" that was just so terrible actually. It was used in the illegal invasion of Iraq,â she added.
On her nomination of Gemma OâDoherty for the 2018 presidential election, Ms Connolly said while she has âmany regretsâ, she did not regret her decision at the time.
âOne canât regret making a decision as best they could at that time. Gemma OâDoherty had been a good journalist, she had been recognised for that.
âQuite clearly at that point she was saying things, and more so afterwards, that would be unacceptable to me.â
Ms Connolly stressed that she did not endorse Ms OâDohertyâs campaign.
Put to her that many people would view a nomination as an endorsement for Ms OâDohertyâs campaign, Ms Connolly said she agreed it could be interpreted as such.
âIâve taken every opportunity to point out thatâs not a correct interpretation,â Ms Connolly argued.
About her controversial visit to Syria, Ms Connolly reiterated she travelled to the country on a âfact finding missionâ and never supported the regime in place.
She described seeing âutter destructionâ the Al Yarmouk camp in Damascus and that it changed her forever.
âI went with a horror of dictatorships. I mean, if it wasnât so serious, it would be funny that I would be accused of supporting a dictatorship,â Ms Connolly said.
On her platform for the presidency, Ms Connolly said the country is now at a âvery differentâ point in its history compared to when Michael D Higgins was elected in 2011.
âWeâre facing a housing crisis which is just an obscenity, and it has been normalised. Weâre part of a world order that has facilitated and normalised genocide,â Ms Connolly said.
She said the Government is going âbackwardsâ on efforts to tackle climate change, and those issues would be âuppermostâ in her mind throughout the campaign.
While Ms Connolly praised Labour for backing her presidential bid, she would not be drawn on her previous comments that the party had âlost its soulâ.
âItâs not a question of what I think of Labour, or what Labour thinks of me, or indeed what Alan Kelly thinks,â Ms Connolly said.
âThis is about a presidential election, whether I have the characteristics to be president of Ireland. The good thing about that is the people of Ireland will decide that.





