An official portrait of former Belfast Lord Mayor Niall Ó Donnghaile should be removed from City Hall, DUP councillors have said.

They want the portrait removed after it emerged the ex-Sinn Fein councillor resigned from the party over sending inappropriate texts to a teenager.

Like all previous Belfast Lord Mayors, Ó Donnghaile’s portrait was painted and installed in City Hall when he served as Belfast’s then youngest ever mayor.

His 12-month term of office ran to June 2012.

On another day of unwanted headlines for Sinn Fein:

  • Taoiseach Simon Harris said the Irish people and parliament were “duped” by Sinn Fein, and there are “still unanswered questions” after Mary Lou McDonald addressed the Dail over a number of party controversies.
  • Deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly said the “grubbiness” of the controversies that have rocked Sinn Fein need to be addressed.
  • First Minister Michelle O’Neill insisted there are “no questions” over Mary Lou McDonald’s leadership of Sinn Fein.
  • Ms O’Neill also said everything the party knows “is now on the public record” as it battles a series of damaging episodes.

Yesterday it emerged that Ó Donnghaile was the member who resigned over sending inappropriate messages to a 17-year-old party member from Northern Ireland.

In the Dail on Tuesday, Ms McDonald admitted the party was first informed about the messages in September 2023 and Ó Donnghaile was suspended. Police and social services were informed, but there was no finding of illegality.

The former Belfast Lord Mayor resigned from Sinn Fein and the Seanad on October 5 2023.

However, it was not until December 21, 2023 when he announced he was stepping down. At the time, health reasons were cited, with Ms McDonald publicly praising his “diligent” service.

This was despite the party knowing about the messages.

Ms McDonald said she did not tell the Oireachtas the reason for Ó Donnghaile’s sudden departure because she was concerned about his mental health.

This afternoon, the DUP group on Belfast City Council noted Ó Donnghaile’s statement on Tuesday that he had “caused great embarrassment” to himself, his family, friends and former colleagues, which was “never my intention”.

The DUP group said: “Intentional or not, it is the view of our party that this portrait remaining in Belfast City Hall would cause great embarrassment to Belfast City Council, and its reputation.

“Therefore, our party are formally requesting its removal be added to the agenda for Party Group Leaders.”

Speaking to reporters in Brussels on Wednesday, Simon Harris said the Irish Government and opposition parties were “concerned” with Sinn Fein’s account of events.

“It’s for Deputy McDonald to decide what she wishes to do next in terms of further information that she wishes to provide.

“It’s clear the the Oireachtas and the people of Ireland were duped, that much is clear.”

In a reference to the next general election, Mr Harris added: “How the leader of Sinn Fein wishes to respond to that is for her, and ultimately how the people of Ireland wish to respond to Sinn Fein will be a matter for them to consider in due course.”

Ms Little-Pengelly, meanwhile, said that information has been “trickling out” from Sinn Fein when there is a need for honesty.

“I think there are very serious questions for Sinn Fein to answer. I think the whole thing’s been very grubby,” she said.

“I think people are fed up and sick of half truths or not truths or issues trickling out.

“If there’s one thing that we have learned right across Northern Ireland, and indeed right across Ireland, is this idea of cover ups or not being truthful, the lack of transparency when it comes to the safeguarding of children is deeply unacceptable.”

Ms Little-Pengelly said that while “the grubbiness” of the controversies need to be addressed, she indicated the institutions were not at risk.

She said that Ms O’Neill and Sinn Fein “need to step up and be absolutely transparent and honest”.

“Ultimately, this isn’t a crisis of the institutions. It’s a crisis within Sinn Fein,” she said.

“Sinn Fein need to get their house in order. No organisation should be operating with a cloak of secrecy.

“We are not and nor should there be criminal organisations which have some sort of a code of silence. We need to step up and show that transparency, the grubbiness of this needs to be addressed, the serious questions need to be answered.”

Ms O’Neill said that there was “complete due diligence” in how the party handled the Ó Donnghaile case.

She said that everything the party knows “is now on the public record”.

Mary-Lou McDonald attempts to quell crises plaguing her party – did she succeed?

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“Mary Lou (McDonald) has set out very categorically everything that we knew and when we knew it in the Dail statement yesterday,” she said.

“She set out in terms of the internal party processes that we went through. I’m very confident that we had complete due diligence in terms of how we handled that case.

“She’s also set out in terms of the aftermath of that, the fact that there were no criminal proceedings brought against Niall Ó Donnghaile himself, and we were very conscious in terms of legal advice that was sought, in terms of naming the individual himself. I think that we can confidently stand over the approach that we took to that.

“As I said, from day one, we’ve set out to try to be as transparent as we can in terms of setting out all of the facts. I’ve done that in the Assembly chamber last week, Mary Lou did it again yesterday in the Dail, and that remains our approach. We’ve always wanted to be as frank as we possibly can with everybody and answer all the questions that people have put to us.”

Ms O’Neill also defended her party president amid a growing storm over Sinn Fein’s handling of the matters.

“No, there are no questions over Mary Lou McDonald’s leadership,” she told reporters.

“I think the Dail was the right opportunity yesterday, and Niall (Ó Donnghaile) himself, he made a public statement in advance of Mary Lou going into the Dail chamber for a fuller statement.”

She indicated that there were “no other” cases of party members under investigation or suspended.

Asked about whether she would give statements in the Assembly on child protection issues, she said: “I’ve stood in front of the Assembly chamber last week. I think I took in excess of, or perhaps potentially up to, 20 questions. I’m trying to be as transparent and open and frank as I possibly can.

“I was before the Assembly committee also, so I’ll continue in that vein.”

The Ó Donnghaile case is the latest controversy to rock Sinn Fein, following the resignation of two party press officers for giving job references to self-confessed child sex offender Michael McMonagle, as well as the resignation of TD Brian Stanley over an unrelated matter.

Earlier, speaking to RTE, Pearse Doherty, Sinn Fein’s finance spokesperson, said Ó Donnghaile’s mental health was the main factor in the party opting not to name him at the time.

“Mr Ó Donnghaile faced the full rigours of the party and the matter was referred to the PSNI as soon as it was established that the complainant was under the age of 18,” he added.

“He would have been suspended immediately from the party.”

Mr Doherty said that “people now know why that full information was not provided”. He also said it was a “stretch” to say that Ms McDonald gave Ó Donnghaile a “glowing reference” when he quit.

Meanwhile, it has emerged Ó Donnghaile continued to be paid by the Houses of the Oireachtas up until January 22. After this he also received a termination lump sum and six monthly termination payments.

On Tuesday, Ó Donnghaile told the Irish News that, in consultation with Sinn Féin, he accepted that his behaviour necessitated stepping down from his Seanad role and as a party member.

“This would also give me the space to focus on improving my health and wellbeing, issues that I have been dealing with my doctor on since mid-2021,” he said.