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Maynooth YFG
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Short History Members of YFG can also be members of Fine Gael and take part fully in the party at all levels. YFG has it's own President and National Executive. YFG was founded by Garret FitzGerald in 1977 as Ireland's first independent political youth organisation. YFG has been involved in many political campaigns since then. In more recent years YFG has campaigned effectively on issues such as The Nice Treaty, Insurance for Young Drivers, the price of housing for young Homebuyers and the issue of youth depression and suicide. YFG believes strongly in the ideal of the European Union and is a member of the Youth of the European People's Party (YEPP) an organisation of three million members.
For more details - See the Young Fine Gael Constitution in PDF format (requires Acrobat Reader)
The Early Years: Young people have always been involved with Fine Gael, since the days of Collins and Mulcahy. In the eclectic 1930's UCC had an active unit of the Blueshirts, and reports of regular jousts, both verbal and otherwise with the local sons and daughters of Fianna Fáil along College Road are part of UCC lore. Student Activism in the late 1960's in Ireland was quite a different creature from its continental cousins. It was a time dominated by the growth of Student Union power, and many of our current Parliamentary Party cut their teeth in the Subbuteo world of SU Politics. However a void did exist, there was a niche within the Fine Gael family, for an independent youth political movement. The year was 1977, the man was Garret Fitzgerald. The Fitzgerald Years:
By 1980 YFG embarked on its crusade to change the illegitimacy laws. Over 150,000 petitions were collected. Garret received a rapturous welcome at that year's National Conference, when he called for YFG to deliver "Free Debate and Uninhabited Declarations".The Haughey Government was floundered on the rocks of gombeen patriotism and financial recklessness, FG waited in the wings to take power. The 1981 Ard Fheis is remembered by many past members, as one of our finest hours. The mood was upbeat, the attendance a record, the enthusiasm and the thirst for victory unquenchable. YFG continued its upward curve, with Maria Stack being elected Vice President of the party aged just twenty years. When the ultimate summit was reached after the 1982 General Election, YFG continued to campaign vociferously on social issues. The 1983 National Conference in Galway was a passionate affair set against the backdrop of the Pro-Life Amendment Debate. YFG rejected the need for a referendum as it threatened to derail the much-vaunted Constitutional Crusade, promised by Fitzgerald. 1983 was a watermark year, it saw YFG and Fine Gael diverge on issues of policy, and this is testament to the independence of our membership at the time. 1983 saw YFG develop North-South Links for the first time. 1983 was a stormy year, the Abortion debate was particularly vicious, conflicts between the conservative and progressive wings of the party opened up, with YFG literally stuck in the middle but never surrendering its independence, a fact graphically illustrated in 1984 when YFG stuck to its guns and led a national protest over the visit of US President Ronald Reagan to Ireland. The 1984 National Conference policy platform was radical. Radical policies on minimum incomes, care for the homeless, and control of building land prices were called for. The passing of the Status of Children Act, 1986 reforming the Dickensian laws on illegitimacy, marked the culmination of five years of YFG campaigning. The 1986 National Conference in Malahide, saw YFG launch its appeal for a 'Yes' Vote in the Divorce Referendum. The Fitzgerald Years were a golden era for YFG. YFG set a radical political agenda which challenged the dismal consensus of previous decades. It saw young people participating in politics at the highest level for the first time ever. It ushered in a new era of north-south relations for young people. It was a period of law reform, a period of social justice and a time when it wasn't unusual for a Taoiseach to use the YFG National Executive as his sounding board for political decisions in Government Buildings. 1987-1994 A time for Consolidation: In 1989 YFG in Trinity College published a blueprint for the future of national policy. It was an impressive document but being read in 2002 its poignancy for a time of mass emigration, youth unemployment and economic stagnation seems quite remote from the Ireland we know of today. By 1990 YFG had embarked on an ambitious project of representing Ireland in the European Young Christian Democrats (EYCD). Brian Murphy was the pioneer in this regard the doyen of our European involvement. The great achievement of this period in our history was the widening and the deepening of our commitment to the European Ideal. During this time YFG won the Vice Presidency of the EYCD, and we have held it ever since. National Conferences were held in Killarney, Cork and Dun Laoghaire in the early nineties. A young whippersnapper called Brian Hayes became National Youth Officer in 1992 reforming and revitalising the YFG organisation both externally and internally. Ups and Downs 1994-2000: Third Level Grants policy was launched in Galway in 1996, this policy is now the cornerstone of FG's commitment to third level students in our current Election Manifesto.The Rainbow Government saw us campaign in Divorce and Bail Referenda, both ultimately successful. In 1998 we held our National Conference in Connemeara. It has been fondly remembered as the YFG social event of the 1990's. Conor Price of Ballinasloe was elected President, the first holder of the office of National Chair to use the title of President. The by-elections continued thick and fast. 1998 saw us in Limerick East, campaigning for Mary Jackman. Branch development in the late 1990's was increased to levels unseen outside of Dublin since the early Fitzgerald years by Richard Hammond, National Organiser. The Inaugural YFG Summer School was held in Carlingford, Co Louth in 1999. Patrick O'Donovan of Newcastle West in Limerick became President in 1999, and led the organisation into a pivotal National Conference in Dublin in the autumn of that year. The subsequent year was difficult for YFG, regional divisions emerged and output and work didn't always match ambition, however YFG reached the end of the millennium in a good state of health. Beyond 2000:
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