Reputed head of crime family to run again for seat in Irish parliament


FILE PHOTO: Independent election candidate Gerard Hutch also known as Gerry ‘The Monk’ Hutch arrives at a count centre following Ireland's general election, in Dublin, Ireland, December 1, 2024. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne/File Photo

DUBLIN, April 30 (Reuters) - Gerard Hutch, ⁠named in a 2023 court case as the head of a well-known ⁠crime family in Ireland, will seek election to the Irish parliament ‌in a by-election next month after narrowly missing out on a seat in a parliamentary election 18 months ago.

Hutch's name is among the confirmed candidates on the Dublin city returning officer's website for the ​May 22 Dublin Central constituency by-election for the ⁠seat vacated by former Irish finance ⁠minister Paschal Donohoe.

Hutch, better known as "The Monk", finished in fifth place in the four-seat ⁠constituency ‌at the 2024 national election.

Analysts say he faces a potentially tougher task this time round with just one seat up for grabs and all ⁠the parties whose candidates were elected last time competing ​again. Hutch's surge at ‌the national election also faltered when he struggled to attract vote transfers ⁠from other candidates.

"I ​think it's great to put someone in there with a chequered past. That's what we need in the Dail (parliament), you need change," Hutch told the Irish Times this week when ⁠asked what it would mean if someone with ​his past were elected to parliament.

"You need a man like me in there who can talk to the guy in the street."

Ahead of the 2024 vote, Hutch said he ⁠was running as he did not think the deprived inner-city community where he grew up was properly represented. Rivals saw his support as a protest vote.

He was identified as head of the Hutch family by an Irish court in 2023 when ​he was acquitted of involvement in a 2016 murder. ⁠He denies being the leader of a crime gang.

The Hutch drug trafficking gang was ​named by the U.S. State Department in 2022 as ‌being locked in a turf war with ​the Kinahan crime group, also based in Dublin, that resulted in 18 murders in the previous six years.

(Reporting by Padraic HalpinEditing by Gareth Jones)

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