County Councillor (2014–2016) Madigan served as a councillor for the
local electoral area of
Stillorgan on
Dún Laoghaire–Rathdown County Council, from May 2014 until her election as a TD in 2016. Madigan issued a leaflet in 2014 claimed that providing accommodation for
Travellers in her constituency would be "a waste of valuable resources". When asked about this later, Madigan claimed "Some people won't want to live beside people in halting sites [...] there might be more crime, that there might be anti-social behaviour".
Dáil Éireann Madigan was elected to the
32nd Dáil at the
2016 general election as a Fine Gael
TD for the
Dublin Rathdown constituency, defeating sitting Fine Gael TD
Alan Shatter by nearly 1,000 votes. She was appointed Chair of the
Committee on Budgetary Oversight in July 2017. She was a member of the
Public Accounts Committee. She introduced a
private member's bill to reduce the waiting time for divorce in Ireland from four years to two, which was passed by the Dáil. On 30 November 2017, Madigan was appointed to the cabinet as
Minister for Culture, Heritage and the Gaeltacht, in a reshuffle following the resignation of the
Tánaiste Frances Fitzgerald. On 29 March 2018, Fine Gael leader
Leo Varadkar appointed Madigan as the coordinator for the party's Yes campaign in the
referendum to repeal the Eighth Amendment. She was re-elected at the
2020 general election, taking the third seat behind Green Party Deputy Leader
Catherine Martin and party colleague
Neale Richmond. On 1 July 2020, Madigan was appointed by the new government as
Minister of State at the Department of Education with special responsibility for special education and inclusion. On 14 January 2021, Madigan came under fire for describing children without additional needs as 'normal' while speaking in the Dáil. "We all know that even for normal children remote teaching is difficult but for children who have additional needs it is particularly difficult," she said. Later that day on Twitter, the minister said she 'sincerely apologises for the language she used.' "It is absolutely not what I meant to say." On 20 January 2021, speaking on
RTÉ's
Today with Claire Byrne, Madigan compared children with additional needs not attending school to the mother and baby homes. "We've spent the last week talking about mother and baby homes, where our most vulnerable were left to their own devices in less than satisfactory conditions and we're now allowing further anxiety and upset to be placed on the shoulders of parents whose children desperately need to go back to school." The Final Report of the Commission of Investigation into Mother and Baby Homes and Related Matters was published the week prior to Madigan's comments. Madigan later apologised in a statement: "I am, as are all involved in supporting these children [children with additional needs], passionate about vindicating their rights and in reaching for an analogy I chose poorly. I apologise fully." Shortly after the first report of the
Creeslough explosion on 7 October 2022, Madigan tweeted that she hoped "they find the culprits" and, after being criticised as irresponsible and insensitive, Madigan quickly deleted the tweet. On 22 March 2024, Madigan announced that she would resign as Minister of State and would not contest the
next general election. ==Maria Bailey legal claim==