Keating was a Catholic merchant and banker from Garranlea, near Cashel, co. Tipperary where his father had, since 1783, leased 22,000 acres of land. The family had been dispossessed during the Cromwellian confiscations, but had re-established itself as a dynasty of prosperous sheep graziers. It was famed for the quality of its livestock, and had been influential in south-east Tipperary since the mid-eighteenth century.
A self-proclaimed ‘old Repealer’, Keating claimed to have espoused the cause ‘since first the association was founded’. He served as a collector for the O’Connell Compensation fund in 1838, and attended the repeal meeting at Thurles in September 1845.
In February 1851, Keating voted against the ecclesiastical titles bill and that April he joined a committee of MPs to mobilise popular opposition to the measure. In August, he attended the formation of the Catholic Defence Association in Dublin. With his cousin John Sadleir, the eminently successful businessman and MP Carlow, 1847-53 and Sligo, 1853-6, he helped form the nucleus of the ‘papal’ or ‘Irish Brigade’, which was pledged to obstruct Russell’s legislation to have the ecclesiastical titles used by Catholic church dignitaries declared illegal. This faction also helped to obstruct the government’s agrarian policy, and Keating participated in their walk out during the committee stage of the titles bill in July.
Keating was elected in second place for Waterford City at the general election of 1852, being pledged to an independent Irish representation in parliament based on opposition to ‘anti-Catholic legislation’ and any ministry headed by Russell.
Along with his cousins Francis Scully, MP County Tipperary, 1847-57, Vincent Scully, MP County Cork, 1852-57, 1859-65 and James Sadleir MP County Tipperary, 1852-57, Keating formed part of a family connection in the Commons led by John Sadleir.
Keating’s parliamentary career was, however, brought to an end as a result of his business links with Sadleir, who had resigned his ministerial position in 1854 after he was implicated in a plot to imprison a depositor of the Tipperary Bank who had refused to vote for him. Keating was the manager of the National Bank of Ireland branch at Cashel and was also a director and the second largest shareholder in the Tipperary Joint Stock Bank, founded by Sadleir in 1839.
