Independent politicians in Ireland
This article has multiple issues. Please help or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these template messages)
|
Independent politicians, who contest elections without the support of one of the political parties, have played a continuous role in the politics of Ireland since independence in 1922.
Provision for independents in electoral law[]
If a candidate is not the candidate of a registered political party, they may be nominated for elections to Dáil Éireann with the assent of 30 electors in the constituency,[1] for elections to the European Parliament with the assent of 60 electors in the constituency,[2] and for local elections with the assent of 15 electors in the local electoral area.[3] They may choose to have the designation non-party next to their name on the ballot paper.[4]
In Seanad elections and presidential elections, candidates are not nominated by parties directly, and party labels do not appear on the ballot.
Independents supporting governments[]
In the case of minority governments, where the party or parties forming the government do not have a majority in the Dáil, they will usually be dependent on independent TDs in votes of confidence. This can be by formal arrangement with the government.
Independents in government[]
In the Inter-Party Government led by John A. Costello as Taoiseach, James Dillon served as Minister for Agriculture. He was an independent TD, having left Fine Gael in 1942 because he disagreed with the policy of neutrality during the Second World War. He rejoined Fine Gael in 1953 and became leader in 1959.
In 2009, Mary Harney continued as Minister for Health as an independent member of the government after the dissolution of the Progressive Democrats, and served until 2011.
After the 2016 general election, 3 independent TDs were appointed to a minority Fine Gael–Independent government on 6 May 2016: Denis Naughten as Minister for Communications, Climate Action and Environment, Shane Ross as Minister for Transport, Tourism and Sport, and Katherine Zappone as Minister for Children and Youth Affairs. Ross is a member of the Independent Alliance, and other members of the Independent Alliance were appointed as Ministers of State. Naughten resigned as Minister on 11 October 2018. Ross and Zappone served until the appointment of a new government on 27 June 2020.
Local government[]
At the 2019 local elections, independents won 185 of the 949 seats on city and county councils.
European Parliament[]
Luke 'Ming' Flanagan has been an MEP for Midlands–North-West since 2014.
President of Ireland[]
The current President of Ireland Michael D. Higgins was elected in 2011 having been nominated by Labour Party members of the Oireachtas, but re-elected in 2018 on his own nomination.
Election results[]
General elections[]
Key for government column:
Independents participated in government |
Majority government |
Minority government |
Election | Seats won | ± | First pref. votes | % | Government |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1921 | 4 / 128 Southern Ireland only
|
No Poll | No Poll | Sinn Féin majority | |
1922 | 9 / 128
|
5 | 48,638 | 7.8 | CnaG minority |
1923 | 13 / 153
|
4 | 85,869 | 8.1 | CnaG minority |
1927 (Jun) | 16 / 153
|
3 | 153,370 | 13.4 | CnaG minority |
1927 (Sep) | 12 / 153
|
4 | 92,959 | 7.9 | CnaG minority |
1932 | 14 / 153
|
2 | 131,890 | 10.4 | FF minority |
1933 | 9 / 153
|
5 | 68,882 | 5.0 | FF minority |
1937 | 8 / 138
|
1 | 128,480 | 9.7 | FF minority |
1938 | 7 / 138
|
1 | 60,685 | 4.7 | FF majority |
1943 | 11 / 138
|
4 | 116,024 | 8.7 | FF minority |
1944 | 10 / 138
|
1 | 94,852 | 7.8 | FF majority |
1948 | 11 / 147
|
1 | 94,271 | 7.2 | FG–Lab–CnaP–CnaT–NLP–Ind |
1951 | 14 / 147
|
3 | 127,234 | 9.6 | FF minority |
1954 | 5 / 147
|
9 | 70,937 | 5.3 | FG–Lab–CnaT |
1957 | 9 / 147
|
4 | 72,492 | 5.9 | FF majority |
1961 | 6 / 144
|
3 | 65,963 | 5.6 | FF minority |
1965 | 2 / 144
|
4 | 26,277 | 2.1 | FF minority |
1969 | 1 / 144
|
1 | 42,230 | 3.2 | FF majority |
1973 | 2 / 144
|
1 | 39,419 | 2.9 | FG–Labour |
1977 | 4 / 148
|
2 | 87,527 | 5.5 | FF majority |
1981 | 4 / 166
|
63,829 | 3.7 | FG–Labour minority | |
1982 (Feb) | 4 / 166
|
46,059 | 2.8 | FF minority | |
1982 (Nov) | 3 / 166
|
1 | 38,735 | 2.3 | FG–Labour |
1987 | 3 / 166
|
70,843 | 4.0 | FF minority | |
1989 | 4 / 166
|
1 | 54,761 | 3.3 | FF–PD |
1992 | 5 / 166
|
1 | 99,487 | 5.8 | FF–Lab (1993–94) FG–Lab–DL (1994–97) |
1997 | 6 / 166
|
1 | 123,102 | 7.9 | FF–PD minority |
2002 | 17 / 166
|
11 | 176,305 | 9.5 | FF–PD |
2007 | 5 / 166
|
12 | 106,429 | 5.2 | FF–Green–PD |
2011 | 14 / 166
|
9 | 269,703 | 12.1 | FG–Labour |
2016 | 19 / 158
|
5 | 338,215 | 15.9 | FG–Ind minority |
2020 | 19 / 160
|
266,529 | 12.2 | FF–FG–Green |
References[]
- ^ Electoral (Amendment) Act, s. 1: Amendment of Electoral Act 1992 (Act No. 4 of 2002, s. 1). 25 March 2002. Act of the Oireachtas. Retrieved 13 July 2019, Irish Statute Book.
- ^ Electoral (Amendment) Act, s. 2: Amendment of European Parliament Elections Act 1997 (Act No. 4 of 2002, s. 2). 25 March 2002. Act of the Oireachtas. Retrieved 13 July 2019, Irish Statute Book.
- ^ Electoral (Amendment) Act 2002, s. 3: Amendment of Local Elections Regulations 1995 (Act No. 4 of 2002, s. 3). 25 March 2002. Act of the Oireachtas. Retrieved 13 July 2019, Irish Statute Book.
- ^ Electoral Act, s. 46: Nomination of Candidates (Act No. 23 of 1992, s. 46). 5 November 1992. Act of the Oireachtas. Retrieved 13 July 2019, Irish Statute Book.
Further reading[]
- Weeks, Liam (2017). Independents in Irish party democracy. Manchester University Press. ISBN 9780719099601.
- Independent politicians in Ireland