Ring offloads management of rural post offices to Naughten

Move comes after weeks of tension between pair over responsibility for 1,100 post offices

Minister for Communications Denis Naughten: responsibility for the post office network is to be transferred back to the Minister. Photograph: Gareth Chaney
Minister for Communications Denis Naughten: responsibility for the post office network is to be transferred back to the Minister. Photograph: Gareth Chaney

After a political turf war with his west of Ireland colleague Denis Naughten, junior minister Michael Ring has offloaded a political headache: responsibility for the post office network is to be transferred back to the Department of Communications.

This reverses a move last summer which saw responsibility for the network move from the Independent Roscommon TD's Department of Communications to the Mayo Fine Gael TD's Department of Rural Affairs.

The move comes as post offices are bracing themselves for a wave of closures as the cash-strapped State company An Post implements a major rationalisation and restructuring plan.

There have been weeks of political tension between Mr Naughten and Mr Ring, over responsibility for the network of 1,100 post offices.

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Widespread closures

Mr Naughten has responsibility for An Post but following last summer’s Cabinet decision, the oversight of the post office network was handed over to the Department of Rural Affairs.

In recent months, as the prospect of widespread closures of rural post offices grew, it came to be seen as something of a poisoned chalice.

Presenting a report on bolstering the role of rural post offices to the Cabinet on Tuesday, Mr Ring told Ministers that his job “was done” and “it is over to Denis Naughten now”.

It is understood that Mr Ring was reluctant have to oversee a programme of closures of rural post offices, widely expected in the coming months when An Post finalises its restructuring plan.

Mr Naughten later said he is looking “forward to helping to deliver a sustainable postal network across the country by focusing on new digital opportunities working closely with the Board, management and staff of An Post, Postmasters and the whole of Government”.

Pat Leahy

Pat Leahy

Pat Leahy is Political Editor of The Irish Times