The
Holy See chose him as
Coadjutor Archbishop of Cashel and Emly on 17 December 1985 and he was consecrated on 9 March 1986. The
Principal Consecrator was Archbishop
Thomas Morris; his Principal Co-Consecrators were
Archbishop Gaetano Alibrandi and Bishop Diarmaid O'Súilleabháin, the Bishop of Kerry. He was parish priest of Tipperary town for two and a half years. On 12 September 1988 he was installed as Archbishop of Cashel and Emly in a ceremony in Thurles Cathedral, presided over by the late Cardinal
Tomás Ó Fiaich. In 1989 he became the first Kerryman to hold the office of Patron of the
Gaelic Athletic Association, which brought immense satisfaction to the former footballers. That same year he was awarded a
PhD degree for a thesis on Carers of the Elderly and Handicapped at
Loughborough University; this was based on studies he conducted in Kerry. Clifford served on the Emigrant Commission of the Bishops' Conference and, in 1987 helped to set up the Chaplaincy Scheme to the young emigrants in the USA.. On 24 March 2010 it was announced by the Holy See that
John Magee had formally resigned from his duties as Bishop of Cloyne and was now bishop emeritus and that Clifford, already apostolic administrator there, will remain as such until the appointment of a full-time successor to the Cloyne diocese. In July 2011 Clifford wrote to the lay faithful of Cloyne and apologised for the poor way in which complaints had been handled by diocesan officials in the Diocese of
Cloyne Clifford served as Apostolic Administrator to the Diocese of Cloyne until the new bishop,
William Crean was ordained and installed on 27 January 2013.
Apostolic visitation In October 2010, Archbishop
Michael Neary of Tuam, along with Cardinal
Seán Brady, Archbishops
Diarmuid Martin of Dublin and Dermot Clifford of Cashel and Emly met for high-level talks with heads of Vatican congregations over the apostolic visitation of Irish dioceses in the wake of the Murphy and Ryan reports. While in Rome, the Irish churchmen met with a team of investigators appointed by Pope Benedict to examine the four Irish archdioceses and "some other as yet unspecified dioceses". In November 2014 he retired on the grounds of age. The "Apostolic Visitors" included Cardinal
Cormac Murphy-O'Connor, Archbishop emeritus of Westminster, inspected Brady's archdiocese of Armagh, and Cardinal
Seán O'Malley, Archbishop of Boston, inspected archdiocese of Dublin. Toronto's Archbishop
Thomas Christopher Collins investigated Cashel, while Ottawa's Archbishop
Terrence Prendergast investigated the western Ireland archdiocese of Tuam. An investigation of the state of Irish seminaries was conducted by Archbishop
Timothy Dolan of
New York. This investigation was hampered by the exclusion of past seminarians who had not been ordained. ==References==