Palestine Ó Snodaigh is a well-known supporter of the Palestinian cause, and has in the past been highly critical of the actions of
Israel. During the
2009 Gaza–Israel conflict, Ó Snodaigh said that
Alan Shatter, a
Fine Gael TD, and the Israeli ambassador to Ireland had exposed the
Oireachtas committee on Foreign Affairs to "propaganda, twisted logic and
half truths". He also said that
Joseph Goebbels, the Nazi propaganda minister, would have been proud of it. The Israeli ambassador to Ireland,
Zion Evrony, labelled Ó Snodaigh's comments as "outrageous" and asked for an apology, which Ó Snodaigh refused. Shatter, the only Jewish member of the Dáil, said he was appalled by Ó Snodaigh's mindset that he would liken a Jewish politician to a Nazi minister. Fine Gael leader
Enda Kenny demanded a retraction and described Ó Snodaigh's attack on Shatter as "despicable and outrageous". European Affairs Minister
Dick Roche, a
Fianna Fáil TD, said Ó Snodaigh's statement was "sickening and calculated to offend" and "the fact that Ó Snodaigh made his remarks in the period immediately before the National Holocaust Memorial Day makes his actions doubly reprehensible." On 30 May 2010, he was one of three Irish politicians who were prevented from leaving
Cyprus by authorities to join an
international flotilla carrying aid to the blockaded Gaza Strip. In March 2011, Ó Snodaigh set off on another flotilla to
Gaza. One of his shipmates was former
TD and then-member of Fianna Fáil
Chris Andrews, who later joined Sinn Féin.
Expenses controversy It was reported in February 2012 that Ó Snodaigh's office had used €50,000 worth of ink cartridges from the Oireachtas between 2007 and 2008. ==Published works==