Oireachtas credit cards used to pay €1,500 bill at Jamie Oliver restaurant and €17,000 K Club bill

ireland
Oireachtas Credit Cards Used To Pay €1,500 Bill At Jamie Oliver Restaurant And €17,000 K Club Bill
There was a €1,423 charge at Chequer Lane by Jamie Oliver last February when a dinner was hosted in Dublin.
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Ken Foxe

A near €1,500 bill at a Jamie Oliver restaurant, a spend of over €17,000 at the K Club and TV licence payments of €640 were among the items paid for on Oireachtas credit cards over the past year.

There was also a €1,000 bill for a working dinner at a boutique lounge and a near €11,500 bill for accommodation at the Conrad Hotel.

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The Oireachtas said it currently has four credit cards in active operation, one for its Finance Unit, one for the Inter-Parliamentary and travel units, and two cards in the names of the clerks of the Irish Parliamentary Association and the British-Irish Parliamentary Assembly.

The largest single bill incurred last year was the €17,284 that was spent at the K Club, or the Kildare Hotel and Country as it is listed in statements.

The Oireachtas said this was for a plenary meeting of the British-Irish Parliamentary Assembly in December and included representatives from across Ireland, the UK, and its various island dependencies.

There was a €1,423 charge at Chequer Lane by Jamie Oliver last February when a dinner was hosted in Dublin in honour of a visit by the Speaker of the Republic of Moldova.

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Another large dining bill was incurred at Agape Café in June 2023 when Leinster House hosted an event at the Kildare restaurant.

The Oireachtas said this €2,298 spend related to an event held in honour of the visit of the President of the House of Representatives of Cyprus.

Also listed in the card statements was an €11,479 charge for accommodation at the four-star Conrad Hotel in Dublin’s city centre last autumn.

It covered accommodation costs for a delegation led by the Speaker of the House of Representatives of the Republic of Nepal last September.

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A four-figure dining bill of just over €1,000 was run up at the boutique Black Door venue on Harcourt Street in Dublin’s south city in July.

That was for a working dinner of the British-Irish Parliamentary Assembly, with attendees from Ireland, the United Kingdom, and the Isle of Man.

Other accommodation costs included a €2,200 spend at the luxury Sefton Hotel in Douglas on the Isle of Man last June for a parliamentary event.

The credit cards were used as well for smaller transactions with €55 spent in Wrights of Howth in January 2023, a €26 bill from Tesco, a €320 charge from Marco Pierre White last June, and almost €150 for bus tours in Berlin.

It wasn’t all dining and accommodation either with a €109 charge for an interiors company in Westmeath, various purchases at the Kilkenny Shop including one for €306 last June, an €88 spend at the Guinness Storehouse, and a €1,078 photographic bill from last November.

There were also four separate payments of €160 for TV licence fees late last year even as the number of people paying the charge collapsed in the wake of the RTÉ spending controversy.

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