Following Fianna Fáil's retention of power in the
1965 general election, O'Malley joined the cabinet as
Minister for Health. He spent just over a year in this position before he was appointed
Minister for Education, a position in which he displayed renowned dynamism. Having succeeded another dynamic young minister,
Patrick Hillery (a political ally and friend who had attended medical school with O'Malley's wife, Hilda) he resolved to act swiftly to introduce the recommendations of an official report on education. As Minister for Education, O'Malley extended the school transport scheme and commissioned the building of new non-denominational comprehensive and community schools in areas where they were needed. He introduced
Regional Technical Colleges (RTCs), now called Institutes of Technology, in areas where there was no third level college. The best example of this policy is the
University of Limerick, originally an Institute of Higher Education, where O'Malley is credited with taking the steps to ensure that it became a university. His plan to merge
Trinity College Dublin and
University College Dublin aroused huge controversy, and was not successful, despite being supported by his cabinet colleague
Brian Lenihan. Access to third-level education was also extended, the old scholarship system being replaced by a system of means-tested grants that gave easier access to students without well-off parents.
Free secondary school education Mid-twentieth century Ireland experienced significant
emigration, especially to the neighbouring United Kingdom where, in addition to employment opportunities, there was a better state provision of education and healthcare. Social change in Ireland and policies intending to correct this deficit were often met with strong resistance, such as
Noël Browne's proposed
Mother and Child Scheme. As a former Health Minister, O'Malley had first-hand experience of running the department which had attempted to introduce this scheme and understood the processes that caused it to fail, such as resistance from
Department of Finance and
John Charles McQuaid. This influenced his strategy in presenting the free-education proposal. Shortly after O'Malley was appointed, he announced that from 1969 all education up to
Intermediate Certificate level would be without cost, and free buses would bring students in rural areas to their nearest school. O'Malley seems to have made this decision himself without consulting other ministers; however, he did discuss it with Lemass.
Jack Lynch—who, as
Minister for Finance, had to find the money to pay for the programme—was not consulted and was dismayed at the announcement. On 10 September 1966, O'Malley addressed a dinner of the
National Union of Journalists in which he publicly revealed the scheme."I propose therefore, from the coming school year, beginning in September of next year, to introduce a scheme whereby, up to the completion of the Intermediate Certificate course, the opportunity for free post-primary education will be available to all families." "This free education will be available in the comprehensive and vocational schools, and in the general run of secondary schools. I say the general run of secondary schools because there will still be schools, charging higher fees, who may not opt to take my scheme; and the parent who wants to send his child to one of these schools and pay the fees will of course be free to do so. "Going on from there, I intend also to make provision whereby no pupil will, for lack of means, be prevented from continuing his or her education up to the end of the Leaving Certificate course. Further, I propose that assistance towards the cost of books and accessories will be given, through the period of his or her course, to the student on whom it would be a hardship to meet all such costs".By announcing the decision first to journalists and on a Saturday (during a month when the
Dáil was in recess), the positive public reaction would temper resistance to the idea before the next cabinet meeting. O'Malley's proposals were hugely popular with the public, and it was impossible for the government to go back on his word. when it was followed for some years by an extension of free education to primary degree level in university, a scheme that was launched in 1996 by the
Labour Party and axed in 2009 by Fianna Fáil's
Batt O'Keeffe.
The Kennedy Report In 1967 O’Malley appointed
Justice Eileen Kennedy to chair a committee to carry out a survey and report on the
reformatory and
industrial school systems. The report, which was published in 1970, was considered ground-breaking in many areas and came to be known as the Kennedy Report. The Report made recommendations about a number of matters, including the
Magdalene laundries, in relation to which they were not acted upon. The report recommended the closure of a number of reformatories, including the
latterly infamous reformatory at
Daingean,
County Offaly. ==Death==