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Mary O'Rourke and Brian Lenihan with RTÉ's Miriam O'Callaghan. Photocall Ireland
fianna fáil vs fianna fáil

“Bertie clearly wanted to get a lot off his chest"

Mary O’Rourke has revealed her thoughts on Bertie Ahern’s comments about Brian Lenihan.

FORMER FIANNA FÁIL minister Mary O’Rourke has given her verdict on Lenihan: A Legacy - a documentary aired on RTÉ last night.

The programme focused on the late finance minister Brian Lenihan, O’Rourke’s nephew.

She said watching the documentary was emotional.

“I was very nostalgic and I was filled with emotion, but I was lucky to have a family to go to and to be with them – that meant a lot to me.

“People say to me ‘How did you get so attached to him? Your nephew is your nephew’. I know that, but I worked for 16 years under the Oireachtas roof with him, so we were workmates as well as relations.”

During the course of the documentary, former Taoiseach Bertie Ahern described Lenihan as “difficult”, claiming he didn’t want to knock on doors other than in Castleknock.

“The more intellectual the are, the more work they don’t want to do,” Ahern said.

O’Rourke told The Ray D’Arcy Show: “Bertie doesn’t like intellectuals, seemingly.”

Bertie was a pint man, and your local man, and I know all that life myself. But I just think that he kind of feared things. He said that Brian liked poetry and things like that, but so what? Lots of us like poetry, but you can still knock on doors.

“Bertie likes to talk and clearly he wanted to get a lot off his chest. I never minded that he didn’t promote Brian, why should he?”

Brian Lenihans Book Launch Bertie Ahern holding a copy of 'Brian Lenihan: In Calm and Crisis'. sam boal sam boal

O’Rourke added that Ahern was “in his own way … fine”.

Lenihan battled pancreatic cancer in the latter stage of his career, something O’Rourke said really focused him, and made him think “I’ve got to mind Ireland, my job and my health.”

I dared to hope he would live … the world lay before him.
I like to think this, he’ll be regarded as a good guy… He was a patriot as well, but I don’t expect everyone to agree with me.

Lenihan died on 10 June 2011.

Overall, O’Rourke said she and her family found the documentary to be “very positive” and “very balanced”.

“There were lots of contrarian views but, sure listen, no one’s a plaster saint and life isn’t real if you are.”

Read: What we learned about Brian Lenihan from last night’s RTÉ documentary

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