Irish Conservative Party
Irish Conservative Party | |
---|---|
Succeeded by | Irish Unionist Alliance |
Ideology |
Conservatism Unionism |
Political position | Centre-right |
National affiliation | Conservative Party |
Colours | Blue |
The Irish Conservative Party (often called the Irish Tories), was one of the dominant Irish political parties in Ireland in the 19th century. It was affiliated with the Conservative Party in Great Britain. Throughout much of the century it and the Irish Liberal Party battled for electoral dominance among Ireland's small electorate within the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, with various parties such as the movements of Daniel O'Connell and later the Independent Irish Party relegated into third place. The Irish Conservatives became the principal element of the Irish Unionist Alliance following the alliance's foundation in 1891.[1]
History
As late as 1859, the Irish Conservative Party still won the greatest number of Irish seats in Westminster, in that year's general election winning a majority of the seats on offer. In the 1840s, the Conservative linked Irish Metropolitan Conservative Society supported Daniel O'Connell's call for repeal of the Act of Union, believing that a resurrected Irish parliament would offer the best chance to defend Protestant and/or unionist interests. Many saw themselves as the successors of Henry Grattan, and even of William Molyneux and his 1698 pamphlet, The Case of Ireland's being Bound by Acts of Parliament in England, in which he made an argument disputing the right of the English Parliament to legislate for Ireland, as the kingdom had had its own parliament from 1297 to 1800.
Though aligned mostly with the Conservative Party in Great Britain, the Irish Conservatives took independent stances on many issues, a fact made easier by the lack of rigid party voting at the time in the British House of Commons.
The loose support for Daniel O'Connell shifted during the potato famine of 1845-48. The English Tory Sir Robert Peel's second ministry sent food shipments to Ireland from late 1845.[2] However Peel lost power in 1846 to the Liberal Whig Lord John Russell, when his party split over reforming the Corn Laws. Russell was an old ally of O'Connell, and his new government preferred a laissez-faire policy of not sending food to the starving poor.[3] Despite this, O'Connell's popularity held up remarkably well in the better-fed parts of Ireland.
Its main rival, the Liberals, lost out to Isaac Butt's Home Government Association (HGA) in the early 1870s, ironically, considering that the HGA was, to a significant extent, made up of former Irish Tories such as Butt himself.
Franchise reform, notably the Representation of the People (Ireland) Act 1868, the Ballot Act 1872 and the Representation of the People Act 1884 which increased the number of Catholic Nationalist electors, and the electoral triumph of the Irish Parliamentary Party under Charles Stewart Parnell, reduced its role as a major electoral force. By the 1880s, the electoral base of the Irish Conservatives had become restricted to Ulster and Dublin. In 1891, the leadership of the Irish Conservatives joined in the formation of the Irish Unionist Alliance (IUA),[4] a new political party which aimed to represent unionists across Ireland.[5] Numerous prominent Irish Conservative politicians subsequently sat for the IUA, including Edward James Saunderson, Walter Long, 1st Viscount Long and William Mitchell-Thomson, 1st Baron Selsdon. The IUA effectively continued the Irish wing of the Conservative Party, as its MPs took the Conservative whip at Westminster. The IUA dissolved in 1922.[6]
Organisations associated with the Irish Conservative Party included the Irish Metropolitan Conservative Society in Dublin, later the Irish Reform Association, the Loyal Irish Union, the Irish Loyal and Patriotic Union and the Kildare Street Club, a gentleman's club in Kildare Street, Dublin. Prominent members included Isaac Butt and the Reverend Charles Boyton. It was strongly associated with the Dublin University Magazine founded by Butt and associates in 1833, and had a strong Trinity College Dublin academic input.
Legacy
In the Irish Free State the Irish Conservative Party did not re-establish itself and much of the IUA's Conservative electorate became supporters of Cumann na nGaedheal, forerunners of Fine Gael. In Northern Ireland, the Ulster Unionist Party became the leading conservative unionist party for much of the twentieth century. The UUP's historical roots were in the Irish Conservative Party, and its MPs often took the Conservative whip at Westminster. Since the 1980s, the Conservative Party has also had its own official section in Northern Ireland, the Northern Ireland Conservatives.
General election results
Election | House of Commons | Seats | Government | Votes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1835 | 12th Parliament | 37 / 105 |
Whigs largest party (Peelite Govt) | 42.4% |
1837 | 13th Parliament | 32 / 105 |
Whigs largest party (Peelite Govt) | 41.5% |
1841 | 14th Parliament | 43 / 105 |
Conservative victory | 40.1% |
1847 | 15th Parliament | 42 / 105 |
Conservative victory | 31.0% |
1852 | 16th Parliament | 42 / 105 |
Conservative victory | |
1857 | 17th Parliament | 44 / 105 |
Liberal victory | |
1859 | 18th Parliament | 55 / 105 |
Liberal victory | 38.9% |
1865 | 19th Parliament | 47 / 105 |
Liberal victory | 44.4% |
1868 | 20th Parliament | 39 / 105 |
Liberal victory | 41.9% |
1874 | 21st Parliament | 33 / 103 |
Conservative victory | 40.8% |
1880 | 22nd Parliament | 23 / 103 |
Liberal victory | 39.8% |
1885 | 23rd Parliament | 16 / 103 |
Liberal victory | 24.8% |
1886 | 24th Parliament | 17 / 103 |
Conservative and Liberal Unionist victory | 50.4% |
Note: Results from Ireland for the UK general elections contested by the Irish Conservative Party.
Sources
- Alvin Jackson, Home Rule: An Irish History 1800–2000 (Phoenix, 2004)
- Andrew Shields, Irish Conservative Party, 1852–1868: Land, Politics and Religion (Irish Academic Press, Dublin, 2007)[7]
Notes
- ↑ Graham Walker, A History of the Ulster Unionist Party: Protest, Pragmatism and Pessimism (Manchester University Press, 4 Sep 2004)
- ↑ Johnston essay accessed 24 September 2014
- ↑ Johnston essay 1846-47; accessed 24 September 2014
- ↑ Alvin Jackson, The Oxford Handbook of Modern Irish History (Oxford University Press, 19 Mar 2014), 52.
- ↑ Graham Walker, A History of the Ulster Unionist Party: Protest, Pragmatism and Pessimism (Manchester University Press, 4 Sep 2004)
- ↑ Pádraig Yeates, Dublin: A City in Turmoil: Dublin 1919 - 1921 (Gill & Macmillan Ltd, 28 Sep 2012)
- ↑ http://irishacademicpress.ie/product/the-irish-conservative-party-1852-1868-land-politics-and-religion/