Following the
1997 general election the Rainbow Coalition lost office. In 1999, Democratic Left merged with the Labour Party, with Rabbitte participating in the negotiations. In October 2002 Rabbitte succeeded
Ruairi Quinn as leader of the Labour Party. Under his leadership the party made some gains in the
2004 local elections. Rabbitte has been described as an extremely good performer in the Dáil, often outshining his Fine Gael counterpart
Enda Kenny. He was also noted for his anti-
Fianna Fáil rhetoric. Under Rabbitte the Labour Party agreed to enter a pre-election pact with Fine Gael in an attempt to offer the electorate an alternative coalition government at the
2007 general election, which took place in May 2007. This was commonly known as The Mullingar Accord and the proposed alternative government was called the Alliance for Change. The
Green Party were also anticipated to be likely members of the coalition government on the basis of agreed points of view on many issues covered by the Mullingar Accord. The election result did not return a sufficient number of seats for the Alliance for Change to occupy government, even with the support of the Green Party. Rabbitte himself commented on the election result: "This leaves Mr. Ahern in the driving seat". Negotiations between Fianna Fáil and the Green Party resulted in a Fianna Fáil leader
Bertie Ahern forming a
new government on 13 June 2007. Following the disappointing result in the election for Labour, Rabbitte announced he was stepping down as leader on 23 August 2007. In his resignation statement, he took responsibility for the outcome of the recent general election, in which his party failed to gain new seats and failed to replace the outgoing government. He was succeeded as party leader by
Eamon Gilmore. Rabbitte gained public attention on 18 November 2010 when he angrily criticised the
Minister for Community, Equality and Gaeltacht Affairs,
Pat Carey, when they appeared together on
Prime Time. An online recording of the outburst was viewed 100,000 times in its first three days there. Rabbitte was re-elected on the first count in the
2011 general election. His running mate
Eamonn Maloney was also elected.
Ministerial career: 2011–2014 On 9 March 2011, Rabbitte was appointed
Minister for Communications, Energy and Natural Resources. The journalist
Fintan O'Toole, writing in
The Irish Times in August 2011, criticised the lack of royalties system for gas and oil in Ireland. He said: "The State is about to sign away almost all our resources on terms by far the worst in the developed world". Rabbitte responded with a letter, saying the article was inaccurate. Rabbitte's response was in turn criticised by
Cian O'Callaghan, a Labour Party member of
Fingal County Council, as "misguided". In July 2014, Rabbitte was replaced by
Alex White as part of a reshuffle of the cabinet. He did not contest the
2016 general election. ==References==