As family and friends sadly lay the remains of Adrian Flannelly to rest in his native Ireland, Glucksman Ireland House at New York University sends it deepest condolence and salutes the man who was the Voice of Ireland and Irish America for over 50 years. As the host of Irish Radio’s ‘Adrian Flannelly Show,” Adrian championed the cause of Irish America and Ireland to a wide audience of listeners and fans. His recipe for success was his sincerity and kindness, broadcasting a mix of current news and sports, Irish music, Irish culture, and his inimitable interviews with leaders in politics, business, and the arts.
Adrian had a disarming style of interviewing guests including New York Governors and Mayors and Irish political leaders which often resulted in the most original and revealing of interviews.
Adrian played a central role in securing visas for Irish people to work in America. As Irish Central reported, he “was a major force on behalf of applicants during the Donnelly and Morrison visa programs, even filling up a truck with thousands of applications from Irish immigrants and driving to Washington, D.C., with his daughter Linda to personally deliver them to the government lottery.”
Adrian will be sadly missed by his wife, Aine Sheridan, children, grandchildren, siblings, nieces, nephews, extended family, friends, and many lifelong listeners. May he rest in peace.
Nell McCafferty and Bernadette Devlin at a protest in Derry, 1973 – two women not to be messed with!
Nell McCafferty (1944–2024) was a trailblazing Irish journalist, author, and civil rights campaigner known as the “fierce, fearless, and fiery” voice of Irish feminism. Born in the Bogside area of Derry, she became a towering figure in Irish public life, challenging the social and legal strictures of 20th-century Ireland.
Bernadette Devlin McAliskey (born 23 April 1947) is an Irish civil rights leader, socialist activist, and former politician who gained international prominence during the Troubles in Northern Ireland. At the age of 21, she was elected as the Member of Parliament (MP) for Mid Ulster, becoming the youngest woman ever elected to Westminster at that time.
SNP claims ‘nothing of substance for Scotland’ from likely PM Andy Burnham.
Andy Burnham, the likely next prime minister of the UK, offered ‘nothing of substance for Scotland’ in his first major speech since announcing running to the job, SNP Westminster leader Dave Doogan said.
Katrine Bussey
29 Jun 2026 2:22 PM
Andy Burnham, the likely next prime minister, offered “nothing of substance for Scotland” as he set out his vision to transform Britain, the SNP has insisted.
While the new Makerfield MP – the frontrunner to replace Sir Keir Starmer – promised there would be “new opportunities to extend devolution in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland”, his speech failed to include details of what these changes could be.
SNP Westminster leader Dave Doogan claimed afterwards that the former Greater Manchester mayor was “making the same empty promises” to Scotland “while keeping all of Westminster’s most damaging policies – Brexit, austerity cuts and Tory spending rules”.
Mr Doogan said: “The SNP has been calling for meaningful devolution for years but there is nothing of substance for Scotland in these proposals – and nothing that will fundamentally improve people’s lives.”
His comments came after a speech where Mr Burnham pledged to set up “Number 10 North” – an outpost of 10 Downing Street based in Manchester to drive his plans to rewire the British state.
In what was his first major speech since Sir Keir Starmer announced he would be leaving Downing Street, Mr Burnham promised: “The days of Whitehall fighting the devolution of power into the regions and nations are over, for good.”
Adding that people in Dundee and Bangor “feel just as distant from Holyrood and the Senedd as they do from Westminster”, he said his new “Number 10 north will be the nerve centre of a rewired Britain” and would be “the conduit through which we redistribute power and resources across the UK”.
But Mr Doogan accused the Makerfield MP of setting out “top-down, England-centric plans without even involving the devolved governments of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland in the conversation”.
Speaking about Mr Burnham, the SNP MP added: “He seems to think Manchester is the north of the UK, when it’s barely the north of England.”
The SNP Westminster leader insisted: “If Andy Burnham was serious about devolution then he should start by devolving the energy powers the Scottish Parliament has already voted for – instead of keeping control over Scotland’s energy at Westminster.
“And if he genuinely believes people should have more control over their future, then he must explain why he wants to block people in Scotland from having any choice over ours – by denying Scotland’s democratic right to choose our own future with independence.”
Meanwhile Scottish Greens’ local government spokesperson, Kristopher Leask, said that Mr Burnham’s speech was “big on rhetoric but short on policy, leaving people in Scotland with more questions than answers”.
The Green MSP stated: “Burnham is right that the UK is far too centralised, but this was clearly a speech aimed at the English regions, with Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland treated as an afterthought.”
Mr Leask argued there was a “clear case” for decisions on energy, employment and workers’ rights to be taken in Scotland – but said the likely future Labour leader had “offered no meaningful detail” on if this would happen.
He added: “One of the biggest and most immediate tests will come in how he responds to our pro-independence Scottish Parliament calling for the power to hold the referendum that Scotland just voted for.
“If Labour wants to distribute power but refuses to trust the people of Scotland with a choice over its future, then its commitment to devolution rings hollow.”
Scottish Conservative leader Russell Findlay also said that Mr Burnham “needs to flesh out what new powers he’s actually talking about”.
But he added: “Scots will be instinctively alarmed at the SNP government being handed even more control, given their astonishing record of failure.
“Social security spending is just one area where the SNP demanded more powers only to create a system that is worse value for taxpayers and wide open to abuse.”
Mr Findlay added: “Weak Labour politicians seem incapable of understanding that they’ll never pacify the SNP by constantly extending devolution.
“John Swinney doesn’t want devolution to work because his only interest is his lifelong obsession of taking Scotland out of the United Kingdom
Reform-led government that seeks to ‘double down on Brexit’ could be ‘accelerator’ towards Irish unity, former taoiseach says.
‘I think it’s healthy that political parties in the south are preparing and discussing this issue’
Matthew O’Toole at the panel discussion along with Leo Varadkar and Ian Marshall.
By David Young
June 25, 2026 at 4:31pm BST
A Reform-led government in the UK that seeks to “double down on Brexit” could act as an “accelerator” towards Irish reunification, former taoiseach Leo Varadkar has said.
Ireland’s current Minister for Justice Jim O’Callaghan also suggested that a rise in English nationalism could influence the debate on Northern Ireland’s constitutional future and potentially bring forward the timing of any future referenda on unity.
Mr O’Callaghan also restated his view that organisations such as the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) could be retained in a united Ireland, and could work alongside Ireland’s Garda, much like separate police forces operate in different areas of England.
Both men made the comments as they took part in discussions at an event in Belfast focused on the future relationship between the island of Ireland and Britain and the prospect of Irish unification.
Former Fine Gael leader Mr Varadkar said the Brexit referendum had acted as an “accelerator for change” when it came to the debate on Northern Ireland’s future.
He said the election of a Reform UK government could have a similar effect, especially if the party pressed for a UK withdrawal from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR).
Such a move would pose profound questions for Northern Ireland, given much of the Good Friday peace agreement of 1998 is underpinned by the convention.
“I think there is a possibility that an accelerator could be a UK government led by Reform, led by Nigel Farage, that doubles down on Brexit, that takes this view that Brexit failed because it wasn’t done properly, and looks for a harder separation from the EU, and reopens these questions around ECHR, where the checks are done, and so on,” said Mr Varadkar.
“That’s a possibility, and it’s a possibility that might be closer than we think.”
Mr Varadkar said he considered a Reform-led government a “possibility” rather than a “probability”.
“I think, in the end, the UK won’t vote for Reform,” the former Irish premier said, as he suggested Andy Burnham may call, and win, a snap general election if elected Labour leader.
“I’m not predicting this, but I think we have to consider the possibility that a UK election, a UK Westminster election, which we were certain was going to be in 2029, now could happen in 2027 and there’s a possibility, although not a probability, that that could result in a Reform-led government or Reform/Conservative coalition, and we have to think about the consequences of that,” he said.
Mr Varadkar’s successor as Fine Gael leader, Simon Harris, recently announced that his party would set out its vision for a united Ireland later this year.
“I was very happy about it, and I’m very glad to see that Fine Gael will be active in this space and part of this debate, so it was welcome,” Mr Varadkar told the Future of these Islands event.
Fianna Fáil TD Mr O’Callaghan said he was not concerned that Fine Gael had made that move on the issue of reunification.
“I think it’s healthy that political parties in the south are preparing and discussing this issue,” he said.
Under the terms of the Good Friday Agreement, a border poll on reunification should be called in Northern Ireland by the incumbent Northern Ireland Secretary when he/she believes there is evidence that public opinion in the region has shifted in favour of constitutional change. In that event, a simultaneous poll would also be held in the Republic of Ireland.
Successive UK governments have consistently declined to specify publicly what criteria will be applied when measuring public sentiment on the issue.
Outgoing prime minister Sir Keir Starmer has previously insisted the question of calling a referendum is “not even on the horizon”.
Mr O’Callaghan published his own paper in 2021 setting out his ideas on what a united Ireland could look like. Those included retaining a role for Stormont and the retention of the PSNI as a stand-alone police service for the region.
On Thursday, the justice minister said political events were likely to be inherently unpredictable in the coming 10 years.
Asked by reporters if he believed referenda could be held by the end of this decade, Mr O’Callaghan said that could be the case if Reform UK came to power.
“There could be (a poll in the next four years) if Reform came to power, if they decided that they wanted to get out of the European Convention on Human Rights and if that required them to dispense with Northern Ireland, that could occur, but I can’t predict the future,” he said.
“I don’t know a date as to when there will be a border poll, but I think it is worthwhile having discussions like this as we have had today.”
Mr O’Callaghan said there was an onus on future Irish governments to start planning for constitutional change.
He acknowledged that would create a “sensitive political issue” for the authorities in Dublin amid concerns about antagonising unionists in Northern Ireland.
The TD said he felt the way to address those sensitivities would be to initially frame the question in the context of the Republic of Ireland and its citizens, rather than broadening the debate to the whole island.
“I think a future Irish government is going to have to prepare for constitutional change,” he said.
“Obviously that decision and the process by which an Irish government prepares for it is a sensitive political issue in itself because we have to be conscious not represented in this room (the event venue in Belfast) is a significant population within Northern Ireland whose political representatives don’t want to engage with this issue.
“And how does an Irish government put in place a preparatory scheme which isn’t seen by unionism as being threatening or an attempt to steamroller them into something they don’t want to do, and that is a sensitive issue.”
On the potential of confining the planning to the Republic of Ireland in the first instance, Mr O’Callaghan added: “That is a sensitive way for the Irish state to put out what it is we’re prepared to do to achieve Irish reunification, and I think that could be seen as something that isn’t threatening or insensitive to other people. There are people in this room who may be completely unsupportive of that and they may say, ‘well, why aren’t people in Northern Ireland having a say in the future of our island?’.
“But I think it’s a sensitive way of starting the discussion by an Irish government in the south.”
SDLP leader Claire Hanna welcomed the contributions made during Thursday’s event at the MAC Belfast.
Afterwards she said the rise of English nationalism “looms quite large” in the debate on Irish unity.
“The prospect of a Reform-led or Reform-infused UK government is serious, and every single speaker acknowledged the reality of that and the potential it would have,” she told reporters.
“Both they (Reform UK) could decide they just wanted to dispense with this region, or some of their platforms and proposals – things like leaving the European Convention on Human Rights – could create a challenge and create a crisis. That is why we are arguing for prudent planning.”
Jeffrey Donaldson’s mentor Enoch Powell long rumoured to have preyed on young boys in NI.
‘Rivers of blood’ firebrand said to have abused victims at hotels on north coast.
Enoch Powell and Jeffrey Donaldson in 1987
Andrew Madden
City Reporter
25 Jun 2026 6:10 AM
Enoch Powell, Jeffrey Donaldson’s political mentor, was accused of paedophilia dating back to the mid-1980s.
Donaldson served as Powell’s constituency agent during his time as South Down MP, and the former DUP leader’s offending, beginning in 1985, overlaps with the period in which he was close to Powell.
When speaking about his background in the dock during his trial, Donaldson never mentioned Powell by name, referring to him only as “the local MP” he once worked for.
Powell is known for his infamous ‘Rivers of Blood’ speech, which ended his mainstream political career, being sacked from then Conservative leader Edward Heath’s shadow cabinet the following day.
He dramatically left the Conservative Party five days before the snap general election in February 1974, mainly over policy on the European Economic Community.
The contest resulted in a hung parliament, and another general election was called for October.
The UUP then recruited Powell to stand in the South Down constituency. It was a move that suited both sides, with the UUP securing one of Great Britain’s most popular politicians, and Powell getting a seat.
His joining of the UUP was not that unusual. He was a frequent visitor to Northern Ireland and strongly supported maintaining the Union, fearing the knock-on effect Northern Ireland leaving could have in Scotland and Wales.
After Powell was elected, the then 20-year-old Donaldson, at that point relatively unknown, became his constituency agent, spearheading his successful bids to retain the seat in 1983 and 1986.
As a constituency agent, he was effectively Powell’s right-hand man, and as his election agent, he ran his campaigns.
During this time, rumours began circulating that Powell had a fondness for young boys, meeting them in hotels on the north coast.
Fleet Street is said to have investigated the claims, which did not become public knowledge in Powell’s lifetime.
Powell and Donaldson’s friendship grew during their time together, with the future DUP leader joining the MP and his wife, Pam, on picnics in the Mournes.
“Jeffrey Donaldson learnt a lot from working with, and often just listening to, the South Down MP,” Donaldson’s authorised biography, Not By Might: A Journey in Faith and Politics, reads.
“When exposed to the breadth and depth of Enoch Powell’s intelligence and knowledge, he felt strangely privileged. It was like being a young student who had been accorded a prized place at the feet of an eminent philosopher or theologian.”
Powell arranged a place for Donaldson, who left school with few qualifications, at Trinity College, Cambridge. However, he turned down the offer, meeting his future wife, Eleanor, soon after and taking up a role as personal assistant to UUP leader Jim Molyneaux.
While he began working for Molyneaux in 1985, he remained close to Powell, serving as his election agent for his successful 1986 South Down by-election. Powell lost his seat in the general election the following year.
Decades later, after his death, rumours that he had a sexual interest in young boys re-emerged.
It was reported in March 2015 that, the previous year, the Church of England’s lead on safeguarding, Bishop of Durham Paul Butler, had handed Powell’s name to police over allegations of child sexual abuse.
At the time, Scotland Yard was investigating claims of a VIP paedophile ring with links to Westminster allegedly operating out of Elm Guest House and Grafton Close children’s home in London.
Dominic Walker, the former Bishop of Monmouth, also passed Powell’s name to police, along with that of Leo Abse, the late Welsh MP.
The Rt Rev Walker had heard the allegations regarding Powell when he was counselling abuse victims in the 1980s.
A Church of England spokesman said in March 2015: “The name of Enoch Powell was passed to Operation Fernbridge by one of our safeguarding teams on the instruction of Bishop Paul Butler.”
Scotland Yard said at the time: “We do not identify individuals that are subject of investigation.”
Operation Fernbridge, launched in 2013, saw charges filed against two men, including Catholic priest Fr Anthony McSweeney, who was found guilty of abusing a boy and jailed for three years in March 2015.
The other man charged, John Stingemore, was found dead at his home before he could stand trial.
Following McSweeney’s sentencing, Operation Fernbridge was closed, and investigations into Elm Guest House were taken over by detectives working on a probe named Operation Athabasca.
By the time Operation Athabasca closed, “no person of prominence” had been conclusively identified as having abused a child at the property, according to a senior Met Police officer involved in the investigation.
One child, however, was removed from Elm Guest House and found to have been abused, and the owners of the property were found guilty of running a brothel.
When the allegations regarding Powell, who died in 1998, emerged in the press, his biographer, Simon Heffer, denounced them as “appalling slurs”.
He said the “outrageous allegation” about an “enormously distinguished public figure who cannot defend himself” would cause the “deepest distress to his family and friends”.
Fewer than three years later, further allegations about Powell would be made by Richard Kerr, a former resident of both Williamson House and the Kincora Boys’ Home, Belfast institutions where dozens of children were sexually abused in the 1960s and 1970s.
Mr Kerr said that in 1973 or 74, when he was 12 or 13, he was taken from Williamson House, which was closed in 1983 and demolished, to be abused by Powell at a guest house near Portrush, and again at a hotel in Belfast city centre in 1977.
With these allegations dating to the 1970s, they appear to be separate from those referred to police by the Right Rev Butler, which related to the mid-1980s.
Mr Kerr is currently involved in legal action against the Northern Ireland Office, the Department of Health, the PSNI and the Home Office over the abuse he suffered at Williamson House and Kincora.
Donaldson stayed close friends with Powell, who was guest of honour at his wedding to Eleanor Donaldson in 1987, until his death, visiting him at his home in London a month before he passed away.
When Powell died in February 1998, Donaldson offered his condolences.
“Obviously, on a personal level, it is very sad news, and our nation will mourn the loss of a man who was a true statesman and held in very high regard,” he said.
“I think, as people look over his remarkable political career, they will come to regard him as a man with great insight and intellect.
“It would be true to say that many of his predictions of the 1960s and 1970s have been proven true in the 1980s and 1990s.”
This would not be the last time Donaldson spoke about his mentor.
When he gave evidence during his trial for a litany of child sex offences, for which he was found guilty, Donaldson spoke of his background, of leaving school at 16 and working as an apprentice electrical engineer, before joining the Young Unionists at 18.
Not referring to Powell by name, perhaps knowing the rumours that surrounded him, Donaldson said he then “worked for my local MP for three years”.