Armagh (UK Parliament constituency)

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For the pre-1801 Parliament of Ireland constituency, the 1801-1885 UK Parliament constituency and the 1921-1929 Northern Ireland Parliament division see Armagh (Northern Ireland Parliament constituencies)
Armagh
County constituency
Created: 1922
Abolished: 1983
Type: House of Commons

Armagh was a Parliamentary Constituency in the House of Commons and also a constituency in elections to various regional bodies. It was replaced in boundary changes in 1983.

Contents

[edit] Boundaries

The seat was created in 1922 when as part of the establishment of the devolved Stormont Parliament for Northern Ireland, the number of MPs in the Westminster Parliament was drastically cut. The seat was focused on County Armagh. In 1983 most of it became part of the Newry & Armagh constituency, with part going to Upper Bann.

[edit] Westminster elections

[edit] MPs from 1922 until 1983

[edit] Assemblies and Forum elections

In 1982 elections were held for an Assembly for Northern Ireland to hold the Secretary of State to account, in the hope that this would be the first step towards restoring devolution. Armagh elected 7 members as follows:

Changes 1982-1986

In 1975 elections were held to a Constitutional Convention which sought (unsuccessfully) to generate a consensus on the future of the province. The seven members elected from Armagh were:

In 1973 elections were held to the Assembly set up under the Sunningdale Agreement. The seven members elected from Armagh were:

[edit] Politics and History of the constituency

From its inception Armagh had a unionist majority, though by the 1970s the nationalist vote was in the mid 30s%.

In 1951, it was one of the last four seats to be uncontested in a UK general election, and in 1954 it saw the last uncontested by-election in the UK.

In 1974 the Ulster Unionist Party repudiated the Sunningdale Agreement and so did not reselect the pro Sunningdale MP, John Maginnis. Instead they ran Harold McCusker, who held the seat until 1983. He was then elected for Upper Bann, which contained part of Armagh.

For the history of the area post 1983, please see Newry and Armagh and Upper Bann.

[edit] See also