Foley was previously a member of
Kerry County Council for the
Tralee local electoral area, serving from 1994 until her election to the Dáil in 2020. She also served as a member of Tralee Urban District Council until its abolition in 2014.
Parliamentary career
After failing in her bid to secure a nomination as a general election candidate in
Kerry North in
2002, Foley was added to the Fianna Fáil ticket as
Tom McEllistrim's
running mate in the same constituency in
2007.[3] She polled 4,937 first preference votes and finished fifth overall in the three-seat constituency after being eliminated on the third count.
Foley again failed in her bid to secure a nomination as a general election candidate in
2016, but was a late addition to the ticket as a third Fianna Fáil candidate in the
Kerry constituency in advance of the
2020 general election.[4][5] She polled 6,856 first preference votes and secured the fifth and final seat at the expense of her party colleague
John Brassil on the eighth count.[6][7][8] Johnnie Wall was co-opted to Foley's seat on Kerry County Council following her election to the Dáil. On her first day in the Dáil, Foley proposed her party leader
Micheál Martin in his successful bid to become
Taoiseach.
Minister for Education
Foley was appointed
Minister for Education in June 2020 following the formation of a new
coalition government, during the
COVID-19 pandemic in Ireland.[9] Her tenure to date has resulted in several gaffes, most prominently involving the
COVID-19 impact on education and state examinations.[10][11] In September 2020, Foley announced that two coding errors were identified in the
Leaving Certificate calculated grades system.[12] She apologised and announced that around 7,200 students were affected, receiving a higher grade than they should have while some students received a lower grade.[13] It was later confirmed that a third error was identified.[14]
In January 2021, Foley and the government were forced to abandon plans for Leaving Certificate students to attend school for three days a week, and instead students would return to homeschooling until February, after the
ASTI directed its members not to return to in-school teaching.[15] Also in January, Foley was forced to abandon plans to reopen special schools for thousands of children with special educational needs following safety concerns among staff unions.[16] In February, Foley announced a new phase of planning for the Leaving Certificate exams,[17] but the ASTI withdrew from discussions with the Department of Education after it said that the plan being developed would not provide a "meaningful Leaving Certificate" for students.[18] In March, she lost her appeals against findings that two home-schooled students were unfairly excluded from the Leaving Certificate calculated grades process.[19]
On 17 December 2022, she was re-appointed to the same position following Leo Varadkar's appointment as Taoiseach.[20]
Personal life
Prior to becoming a TD, she was a teacher at Presentation Secondary School, Tralee. She is married to fellow teacher Denis Maguire. Her parents are Denis and Hannah Foley. Her father
Denis Foley was a Fianna Fáil TD for
Kerry North from 1981 to 1989 and 1992 to 2002.[21]