Everything about The Irish Parliamentary Party totally explained
The
Irish Parliamentary Party (IPP) (commonly called the Irish Party) was formed in 1882 by
Charles Stewart Parnell, the leader of the
Nationalist Party, replacing the
Home Rule League, as official parliamentary party for Irish nationalist
Members of Parliament (MPs) elected to the
House of Commons at
Westminster within the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland up until 1918. Its central objectives were legislative independence for Ireland and land reform. Its constitutional movement was instrumental in laying the groundwork for Irish self-government through three
Irish Home Rule bills.
Severing the union
The IPP evolved out of the
Home Government Association founded by
Isaac Butt after he defected from the
Irish Conservative Party in 1870, to gain a limited form of freedom from
Britain in order to protect and control Irish domestic affairs in the interest of the Protestant landlord class, after
William E. Gladstone and his
Liberal Party came to power in 1868 under his slogan
Justice for Ireland, when Irish Liberals gained 65 of the 105 Irish seats at Westminster. Gladstone said his mission was to pacify Ireland and with the
Irish Church Disestablishment Act 1869 began with the
disestablishment of the
Anglican Church of Ireland whose members were a minority who made all political decisions in Ireland and would have largely voted
Conservative . He also introduced his first land bill which led to the
First Irish Land Act 1870, implementing limited
tenant rights, thereby infringing on the powers of the Irish landlords to indiscriminately evict tenant farmers. At first the Catholic hierarchy supported Gladstone supervising Irish affairs, hoping to gain financial aid for a Catholic University. But his educational programme of 1873 didn't provide for a denominational university.
The Home Government Association adopted educational issues and land reform into its programme, the hierarchy then favouring a Dublin based parliament. The increasing Catholic numbers within the association frightened off its Protestant, landlord element. The association was dissolved and Butt replaced it by the
Home Rule League. Gladstone unexpectedly called a new
general election in 1874, which helped bring the League to the foreground. Since 1872 the
Secret Ballots Act had been introduced, so that voting was to be done secretly for the first time from then on. The League put denominational education, land reform and release of political prisoners at the centre of the movement. It had difficulty finding reliable candidates to support its Home Rule issue, though succeeded in winning fifty-nine Irish seats (and one UK seat), many with ex-Liberals.
Party inaugurated
After the election they assembled in Dublin and organised themselves into a separate Irish parliamentary party in the Commons. The political outlook appeared encouraging at first, but the party displayed no initiative to achieve anything, the Liberals and Gladstone having lost the election. Butt displayed lack of leadership, didn't commit his party to anything. He made some excellent speeches but failed to persuade any of the major parties to support bills beneficial to Ireland, nothing worthwhile reaching the statute books.
A minor group of twenty Irish members, the genuine "Home-Rulers" adopted the method of parliamentary
"obstructionism" to snap Westminster out of its complacency towards Ireland by proposing amendments to almost every bill and making lengthy overnight speeches. This didn't bring Home Rule closer but helped to revitalise the Irish party. Butt consider obstructionism a threat to democracy, its greatest benefit undoubtedly that it helped bring Charles Stewart Parnell to the fore of the political scene when in 1876 he joined the obstructionists. An internal struggle began between Butt’s majority and Parnell’s minority leading to a rift in the party, Parnell determined to obtain control of the Home Rule League.
Land-war mainspring
Parnell first worked successfully to have
Fenians who missed out on Gladstone’s earlier amnesty freed, including
Michael Davitt, who was very impressed by Parnell. After his release in 1877 Davitt travelled to
America to meet
John Devoy, the leading
Irish-American Fenian and raise funds. During 1878 Parnell also met with leading members of the Irish American Fenians. In October Devoy agreed to a
New Departure of separating militancy from the constitutional movement in order to further its path to Home Rule. Throughout 1879 Parnell continued to campaign for land reform and when Davitt founded the
Irish National Land League in October 1879 Parnell was elected president, but didn't take control of it, favouring to continue to hold mass meetings. Isaac Butt died of strain later that year and Parnell held back in grabbing control of the party. Instead he too travelled to America with
John Dillon on a fund raising mission for political purposes and to relieve distress in Ireland after a world economic depression slumped the sale of agricultural produce.
At the
general election of April 1880, sixty-four Home Rulers were elected, twenty-seven Parnell supporters, facilitating in May his nomination as leader of a divided Home Rule Party and of a country on the brink of a land war. He immediately understood that supporting land agitation was a means to achieving his objective of self-government. The
Conservatives under
Disraeli had been defeated in the election and Gladstone was again Prime Minister. He attempted to defuse the land question with
Balfour’s
dual ownership Second Land Act of 1881 which failed to eliminate tenant evictions. Parnell and his party lieutenants,
William O'Brien, John Dillon, Michael Davitt,
Willie Redmond, went into a bitter verbal offensive and were imprisoned in October 1881 under the
Irish Coercion Act in
Kilmainham Jail for "sabotaging the Land Act", from where the
No-Rent Manifesto was issued calling for a national tenant farmer rent strike which was partially followed. Although the League discouraged violence, agrarian crimes increased widely.
Truce and treaty
In April 1882 Parnell moved to make a deal with the government, the settlement involved withdrawing the manifesto and undertaking to move against agrarian crime, seeing militancy would never win Home Rule. The so-called
Kilmainham Treaty, a truce not dissimilar to truces to follow, marked a critical turning point in Parnell’s leadership, though it resulted in losing the support of Devoy’s American-Irish. However, his political diplomacy preserved the national Home Rule movement after the
Phoenix Park Murders in May of the
Chief Secretary for Ireland and his Under Secretary. For the next twenty years Fenians and physical-force militancy ceased to play a role in Irish politics.
With the Land League suppressed and internally fracturing, Parnell resurrected it in October as the
Irish National League (INL). It combined moderate agrarianism, a Home Rule programme with electoral functions, was hierarchical and autocratic in structure with Parnell wielding immense authority and direct parliamentary control. Parliamentary constitutionalism was the future path. The informal alliance between the new, tightly disciplined National League and the Catholic Church was one of the main factors for the revitalisation of the national Home Rule cause after 1882. Parnell saw that the explicit endorsement of Catholicism was of vital importance to the success of this venture. At the end of 1882 the organisation already had 232 branches, in 1885 increased to 592 branches. He left the day-to-day running of the League in the hands of his lieutenants
Timothy Harrington as Secretary, William O’Brien editor of its newspaper
United Ireland and
Timothy Healy.
Parnellism reigns
The result of these reforms and reorganisation were fully reflected in the first
general election of November–December 1885 with extended suffrage under the
1884 Reform Act increasing the number of Irishmen, many small farmers, who had a right to vote from 220,000 to 500,000. The election increased the total Irish Party representation from sixty three to eighty-five seats, which included seventeen in Ulster. In January 1886 the INL had developed to 1,262 branches and could claim to contain the vast body of Irish Catholic public sentiment. It acted not merely as an electoral committee for the Irish Party, but as local law-giver, unofficial parliament, government, police and supreme court. Parnell’s personal authority in the organisation was enormous The INL was a formidable political machine built in the traditional political culture of rural Ireland. It was an alliance of tenant-farmers, shopkeepers and publicans. No one could stand against it.
Unusually, the party even secured a seat in the English city of
Liverpool, where
T. P. O'Connor won the
Liverpool Scotland seat in 1885 and retained it in every election until his death in 1929 - even after the demise of the actual party (O'Connor being returned unopposed in the elections of 1918, 1922, 1923, 1924, and 1929).
Parnell’s new Irish Parliamentary Party emerged swiftly as a tightly disciplined, and on the whole, energetic body of parliamentarians with strict rules. The inauguration of the ‘party pledge’ in 1884 decisively reinforced that each member was required to sit, act and vote with the party, one of the first instances of a
whip (
Richard Power) in western politics. The members were also paid stipends, or expense allowances from party funds, which helped both to increase parliamentary turnout and enabled middle-class members such as William O’Brien or later
D. D. Sheehan attend parliament, long before other MPs first received state pay in 1911. The profiles of the 105 Irish MPs had changed considerably since 1868 when 69% were landlords or landlords’ sons, reduced to 47% by 1874. Those with professional background increased from 10% to 23% in the same period, by the early 1890s professionals exceeding 50%.
Home Rule delayed
Now at his height Parnell pressed Gladstone to resolve the Irish Question with Home Rule, but the Liberals were divided. Parnell then sided with the Conservatives, bringing down Gladstone’s government. Both parties now courted Parnell. In the
1885 general election Parnell’s IPP Home Rulers had 86 seats, the 335 seats for the Liberals robbing him of his bargaining position with the Conservatives who only achieved 249 seats. Gladstone by now converted to granting Home Rule, on introducing the first
Home Rule Bill 1886 and after a long and fierce debate, made a remarkable, beseeching parliament to pass the bill which was however defeated by 341 to 311 votes.
Since 1882 Parnell’s successful drive for Home Rule created great anxiety amongst Protestants and
Unionists north and south alike, fearing Catholic intolerance from a nationalist parliament in Dublin under their control. It resulted in the revival of the
Orange Order to resist Home Rule and the forming of an
Irish Unionist Party. With the Conservatives playing the "Ulster card" and sections of the Liberal faction voting against the bill, Gladstone hinted that eventually a separate solution for Ulster might need to be sought. His observation echoed far into the next century. With the defeat of his bill he dissolved parliament and called an
election for July 1886, the result swinging in the other direction, Conservatives and Liberal Unionists between them winning a clear majority.
The Irish Party retained 85 seats and, in the years up to 1889, centred itself around the formidable figure of Parnell who continued to pursue Home Rule, striving to reassure English voters that it would be of no threat to them. During this period the National League was out of contact with him and primarily concerned with its own vested interests, keeping up local agitation to further the not fully resolved land question, and bringing Liberal voters to slowly increase their support for Home Rule.
Zenith eclipse
Parnell successfully exposed a devious Conservative intrigue to associate him and his party with crime and violence through forged "
Pigott Papers" from which he was vindicated in February 1890. Gladstone invited Parnell to his house to discuss a renewed Home Rule bill. This was the high point of Parnell’s career. However, since 1880 he'd had a family relationship with a separated woman
Katharine O'Shea who bore him three children. Her divorce proceedings first came to court late in 1890, in which Parnell was named co-respondent. This was a political scandal for English
Victorian society. Gladstone reacted by informing Parnell that if he were re-elected leader of the Irish Party, Home Rule would be withdrawn. Parnell didn't disclose this to his party and was selected leader on
25 November.
A special meeting of the party a week later lasted six days at the end of which 45 "anti-Parnellites" walked out, leaving him with 27 faithful followers,
J. J. Clancy one of his key defenders. Both sides returned to Ireland to organise their supporters into two parties, the former Parnellite
Irish National League (INL) under
John Redmond and John Dillon’s anti-Parnellite
Irish National Federation (INF). By-elections in 1891 were fought with bitter venom by the INF anti-Parnellites, Dillon and Healy making extremely personal attacks on Parnell. The INF was also supported by the Catholic clergy who went to aggressive extremes to ensure that INF candidates were returned.
Parnell worked untiringly between Ireland and Britain making speeches for support which he actually got from the (IRB) Fenians who rallied to him. He was married in June 1891 to Mrs O’Shea. His health deteriorated seriously, dying in October in their Brighton home. His funeral in Dublin was attended by 200,000 people. In his speeches he was convinced of an Ireland completely separated from Britain, but was ambiguous, never committing himself nor distancing himself, from the use of physical-force.
Party divided
In the
1892 general election that followed,
Redmond’s Parnellites won a third of the votes but only nine seats, the anti-Parnellites returned 72 MPs divided between Dillonites and a fragmented minority of six
Healyites - the People's Rights Association. Gladstone and the Liberals were again in power, the divided Home Rulers holding the balance of power. He brought in his promised
second Home Rule Bill in 1893. It was master-handled through three readings of the Commons by William O’Brien and passed in September by 301 votes to 267, during which Unionist conventions called in Dublin and Belfast to oppose the bill, denounced the possibility of partition. A week later 419 peers in the
Lords rejected it, only 41 supporting. Gladstone retired in 1894.
The Conservatives returned to power in the
1895 general election, remaining in office until 1905. During those years Home Rule wasn't on their agenda. Instead, with
Arthur Balfour’s
Constructive Unionism approach to settling the Irish Question they enacted many important reforms introduced by the Irish members, who on the other hand, made no effort to settle their party differences. This bred apathy amongst the Irish public towards politics, much needed financial contributions from America ebbing away. In this period of political disarray and disunity of purpose young Irish nationalists turned instead to the country’s’ new cultural and militant movements, enabling the Church to fill the political vacuum.
The unresolved land reform situation was again the mainspring for renewed political activity. William O’Brien had withdrawn from parliament to Mayo and in 1898, driven by the plight of the farming community’s need for more land, formed together with Davitt a new land movement, the
United Irish League (UIL). It quickly spread first in the west, the following year nation-wide like the old Land League and attracted members from all factions of the two split parties, O’Brien threatening to displace them and take them both over.
Reconstruction
The outbreak of the
Second Boer War in 1899 was condemned by both Irish factions, their combined opposition helped to bring about a measure of understanding between them. By 1900 the threat of O’Brien swamping and out-manoeuvring them at the upcoming elections forced the two divided parties, the INL and the INF, to re-unite. He was the prime mover in merging them under a new programme of agrarian agitation, political reform and Home Rule into a new united Irish Parliamentary Party. Redmond, leader of the smaller INL group, was chosen as its leader mainly due to the personal rivalries between the INF's Anti-Parnellite leaders. There followed a period in which much political development occurred.
The UIL, explicitly designed to reconcile the fragmented party, was accepted as the parliamentary nationalist’s main support organisation. O’Brien strove ahead with his campaign of agrarian agitation, by 1902 succeeded in bringing landlords and tenants together for discussions. Encouraged by the Chief Secretary
George Wyndham a Land Reform Conference followed, its outcome the basis for O’Brien getting the Wyndham
Land Purchase Act 1903 through parliament, which abolished
landlordism enabling tenant farmers buy out their landlord’s land at favourable annuities, settling the land question.
Renewed rift
But O’Brien stood alone. Dillon and Davitt were opposed to peasant proprietorship, fearing it would weaken their support for Home Rule. In 1904 O’Brien was purged out of the party, his UIL taken over by Dillon’s ally,
Joseph Devlin, a young Belfast MP, as its new secretary. Devlin had founded a decade earlier the Catholic sectarian
neo-Ribbon Ancient Order of Hibernians (AOH), organising its rise first in Ulster and after he'd control of the UIL, eventually across the south, displacing the UIL. The Irish Party came to have an unhealthy dependence on the AOH.
The
1906 general election saw the Liberals back in power with 379 seats, an overwhelming majority of 88 over all other parties, after they promised Home Rule.
Redmond’s IPP with 83 seats at first delighted until the Liberals backed down on Home Rule, knowing it had no chance in the Lords. The IPP rift with O’Brien deepened after he guided the 1906 Labourers (Ireland) Act through parliament, which provided an extensive social housing programme for rural labourers. He rejoined the party in 1907 for the sake of unity, was then driven out again by the party’s vigorous militant support organisation, Devlin’s "Hibernians", after which O’Brien founded his dissident
All-for-Ireland League (AFIL) Party in 1909.
Notable legislation
During the previous years many notable Acts of social legislation were pressed for and passed in Ireland’s interest:
- The creation of the Congested Districts Board in 1891, which built public works for, and provided employment in, the poor districts of western Ireland.
- The extensive 1898 Local Government Act abolished the old landlord-dominated Grand Juries and replaced them by forty-nine county, urban and rural district councils, managed by Irish people for the administration of local affairs. The councils were very popular in Ireland as they established a political class, who showed themselves capable of running Irish affairs. It also stimulated the desire to attain Home Rule and to manage affairs on a national level. A less positive consequence was that the councils were largely dominated by the Irish Party, becoming the wielders of local patronage.
- Irish Department of Agriculture Act and Technical Instructors Act (1899) (initiative of Horace Plunkett)
- Tenant Land Purchase Acts: (Wyndham Act 1903 and Birrell Act 1909) (the O'Brien Acts), contributing greatly to the solution of the contentious land question
- Labourers (Ireland) Acts (Bryce Act 1906 and Birrell Act 1911) (the Sheehan Acts), providing rural labourers with extensive housing
- Town Tenants Act (1906)
- Evicted Tenants Act (1907)
- Old Age Pensions Act (1908)
- Irish (Catholic) University Act (1908)
- Housing of the Working Classes (Ireland) Act (1908) (the Clancy Act)ff
Home Rule succeeds
Following the
December 1910 general election the
Liberals lost their majority, and were dependent on Labour and the Irish (IPP and AFIL) parties 84 seats.
Redmond, holding the balance of power in the Commons, renewed the old "Liberal Alliance" this time with
Asquith as Prime Minister. Asquith for budget reasons had no choice but to agree to a new Home Rule Bill and the removal of the veto power of the Lords. The passing of the 1911
Parliament Act limited the Lords to a two year delaying power and ensured that Redmond’s reward of a Government of Ireland Bill for the whole of Ireland introduced in 1912 would subsequently achieve national self-government in Dublin by 1914.
This prospect after 40 years of struggle was greeted optimistically, even when self-government was initially limited to running Irish affairs. But for Unionists, convinced the Union with the United Kingdom was economically best for Ireland, and for Protestants, now that Devlin’s paramilitary AOH organisation had saturated the entire island, fearing a Church dominated nationalist government, it was a disaster.
After the Bill passed its first readings in 1913, Ulster Unionist’s opposition became a repeat scenario of events in 1886 and 1893, their leader
Sir Edward Carson approving of an
Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) militia to oppose Home Rule. Unionists and the Orange Order in mass demonstrations determined to ensure that it wouldn't apply for them. Nationalists in turn formed the militant
Irish Volunteers objectively to enforce Home Rule, recruiting from the former
IRB and
Fenian movements, Redmond quickly taking over its control. Unfortunately Redmond and his IPP nationalists, as later those who succeeded them in 1919, had little or no knowledge of Belfast, underestimating Unionist resistance as a bluff, insisting “Ulster will have to follow”. William O’Brien who in 1893 had worked closely on passing the Second Home Rule Bill, warned to no avail, that if adequate provisions were not made for Ulster, All-Ireland self-government would never be achieved.
The Bill was the centre of intense parliamentary debate and controversy throughout 1913–14 before it passed its final reading in May, denounced by the O’Brienite AFIL Party after Carson made provision in an amending bill for the future partition of Ireland into a North and South, permanent or provisional to be negotiated. This was deeply resented among nationalists and unionists of the southern and western
Irish Unionist Party. The Third
Home Rule Act 1914 received Royal Assent in September 1914, celebrated with bonfires across southern Ireland.
Europe intervenes
The outbreak of
World War I in August led to the suspension of the Home Rule Act for the duration of the war, expected to only last a year. The war defused the threat of civil war in Ireland and was to prove crucial to subsequent
Irish history. After neutral
Belgium had been overrun by
Germany,
Redmond and his party leaders, in order to ensure Home Rule would be implemented after the war, called on the Irish Volunteers to support Britain’s war effort (her commitment under the
Triple Entente and the
Allied cause of maintaining a Europe free from German oppression).
The Volunteers split on this issue, the larger majority forming the
National Volunteers, enlisting enthusiastically in
Irish regiments of the
10th (Irish) Division and the
16th (Irish) Division of the
New British Army formed for the war. Unlike their
36th (Ulster) Division counterparts and the Ulster Volunteers who manned it with their own trained military reserve officers, the southern Volunteers possessed no officers with previous military experience with the result that the
War Office had the 16th Division led by
English officers, which with the exception of Irish General
William Hickie, and the fact that the division didn't have its own specific uniforms, was an unpopular decision. The War Office also reacted with suspicion to Redmond’s remark that the Volunteers would soon return as an armed army to oppose Ulster’s resistance to Home Rule.
When the war situation worsened, a new Conservative-Liberal coalition government was formed in June 1915. Redmond was offered a seat in its cabinet, which he declined. This was welcomed in Ireland but greatly weaken his position after his rival Carson accepted a cabinet post. As the war prolonged, the IPP’s image suffered from the horrific casualties in
Gallipoli and the
Dardanelles as well as on the
Western Front. The party was taken by surprise by the
Easter Rising in 1916, launched by a section of the Irish Volunteers who had remained in Ireland. The manner in which British
General Maxwell dealt with its leaders won sympathy for their cause. Further problems for the party followed Asquith's abortive attempt to introduce Home Rule in July 1916 which failed on the threat of partition. Again
Lloyd George's initiative to entangle the Home Rule deadlock after Redmond called the
Irish Convention in June 1917, when
Southern Unionists sided with Nationalists on the issue of Home Rule, ended unresolved due to
Ulster resistance.
Crisis and change
Home Rule’s prominent figurehead John Redmond died in March 1918 at the close of the Convention, John Dillon taking over the IPP leadership. In April the German
Spring Offensive overran the Allied front causing a severe manpower shortage which resulted in a clumsy cabinet
dual policy decision by Lloyd George linking implementing Home Rule with extending
conscription to Ireland. The Irish party withdrew in protest from
Westminster and returned to Ireland to join forces with other national organisations in massed
anti-conscription demonstrations in Dublin. Although conscription was never enforced after America’s late intervention in the war halted the German advance, the threat of conscription radicalised Irish politics.
Sinn Féin, the political arm of the Volunteer insurgents, had public opinion believe that they alone had prevented conscription.
The Irish party held its own in by-elections up to the end of 1916 and returned its candidates, the last in the
West-Cork by-election of October 1916. The tide changed after it lost three by-elections in 1917 to the more physical-force republican Sinn Féin movement, which in the mean time had built up 1,500 organised clubs around Ireland and exceeded the strength of the old
UIL, most of the latter members now joining the new movement. At the end of the war in November 1918 when elections were announced for the
December general election, the Irish electorate of nearly two million had a three-fold increase due to a new "Representation of the People Act". Women were granted franchise for the first time (confined to those over thirty) and a vote to every male over twenty-one years of age. This increased the number of voters from 30% to 75% of all adults.
The Irish Parliamentary Party was confronted for the first time with double competition, both from Unionists and Sinn Féin (the Irish Labour Party had agreed to abstain so as not to complicate matters for Sinn Féin by introducing socialist proposals). In the past the IPP was only accustomed to compete with its own candidates within the Home Rule movement. It never had to fight an election so that its party branches and organisation had no work to do and slowly declined or disappeared. As a result, in most constituencies the new young local Sinn Féin organisation controlled the whole electoral scene well in advance of the election making it in many cases pointless for an IPP candidate to stand for election. In 25 constituencies the IPP didn't contest the seats, so that Sinn Féin candidates were returned unopposed.
Elsewhere the Irish Party lost practically all of its seats, although its share of votes were considerable. This was on account of the "first past the post" British electoral system. Votes cast for the IPP were 220,837 (21.7%) for merely 6 seats (down from 84 out of 105 seats in 1910). Sinn Féin votes were 476,087 (or 46.9%) for 48 seats, plus 25 uncontested totalling an impressive 73 seats. The IPP simply didn't win a fair share of seats because the election wasn't run under a "proportional representation" system. Unionist (including Unionist Labour) votes were 305,206 (30,2%) – by which Unionists increased their representation from 19 to 26 seats. The Irish Party leader Dillon lost his seat and the party was dissolved. The remnants of the IPP later re-established itself with six members to form the
Nationalist Party in northern Ireland under
Joe Devlin.
27 of the newly elected Sinn Féin MPs assembled in Dublin on
21 January 1919 and formed an independent Irish parliament, or
First Dáil Èireann of the thirty-two counties. Their remaining MPs were either still imprisoned or impaired. Britain didn't recognise the Dáil's unilateral existence, which led to the
Anglo-Irish War. Britain remained committed to introducing Home Rule in Ireland, and in 1921 implemented the
Fourth Home Rule Act, which
partitioned Ireland into
Northern Ireland and a non-functioning
Southern Ireland prior to the
Anglo-Irish Treaty. After the
Irish Civil War many former IPP followers in the south went on to join the pro-Treaty
Cumann na nGaedheal party in the 1920’s, its remaining AOH adherents lingering on to serve as Francoists in the
Spanish Civil War or in the quasi-fascist
Blueshirt movement of the 1930s.
Party’s legacy
The greatest achievement of the IPP was the introduction to Irish society of a parliamentary constitutional tradition and all that went with it – a fully up and running local government administration with its diverse institutions, which had rooted itself more deeply than anyone could have imagined into the life of the country. The party had above all (in the era prior to 1914) contributed in its prime to the political maturity of the nation and to the transformation of its society.
This in turn paved the way for the creation of the
Irish Free State, in which its parliament,
Dáil Éireann, had scarcely started to function before, almost unconsciously, it began to utilise and to build upon the constitutional tradition it had inherited. This is perhaps the highest tribute that can deservedly be bestowed upon the old Irish Parliamentary Party, which during fifty years of hard and exacting as well as frustrating parliamentary labours, established and fostered the development of representative institutions which gave stimulus to democratic action and discussion at every level of political involvement. Its particular legacy remains that it was the last and only party to represent and serve an undivided Ireland.
Party Leaders (1882–1921)
Charles Stewart Parnell (1882–1891)
John Redmond (Parnellite minority) (1891–1900)
Justin McCarthy (anti-Parnellite majority) (1891–1892)
John Dillon (anti-Parnellite majority) (1892–1900)
John Redmond (reunited party) (1900–1918)
John Dillon (1918)
Joe Devlin (1918–1921)Further Information
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