De Valera explicitly instructed Ua Buachalla as Governor-General to keep a low public profile, and not to fulfil public engagements, which was part of de Valera's policy to make the office an irrelevance by reducing it to invisibility. While he continued to give
royal assent to legislation, summon and dissolve
Dáil Éireann and fulfil the other formal duties of the office, he declined all public invitations and kept himself invisible, as advised by his Government. In fact in his period in office he performed only one public function: the receipt of the credentials of the French Ambassador to Ireland in the Council Chamber, Government Buildings, 1933, on behalf of King
George V. However, de Valera subsequently had that duty moved from the Governor-General to his own post of
President of the Executive Council; instead of presenting his credentials to Ua Buachalla, the US Legation Minister,
William Wallace McDowell, presented himself to de Valera. One of the few other occasions that Ua Buachalla was mentioned at all in public was when, in the aftermath of the death of King George V in January 1936, he had to reply to messages of condolence sent to the Irish people by United States President
Franklin D. Roosevelt and the
United States Secretary of State Cordell Hull. On de Valera's instruction, Ua Buachalla did not reside in the official residence of the Governor-General, the Viceregal Lodge (now called
Áras an Uachtaráin, the residence of the
President of Ireland). The official English title "Governor-General" was largely replaced by the official
Irish title "Seanascal" or its direct translation, "
Seneschal"; however, "Governor-General" remained the legal form used in official English-language documents and proclamations. Ua Buachalla refused all but
£2,000 of the £10,000 salary of the Governor-General. ==Falling out with de Valera==