Liam Kelly (Irish republican)
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Liam Kelly (born c. 1920)[1] was an Irish republican, who was elected both to House of Commons of Northern Ireland (1953 - 1958) (as an abstentionist) and as a member of Seanad Éireann (1954 - 1957) (which he did attend). He was also a volunteer in the Irish Republican Army (IRA) and after his expulsion from that organisation in 1951 of a splinter group Saor Uladh.
Kelly was a prominent member of the IRA from which he was expelled for insubordination in 1951, having carried out military activity with volunteers from east Tyrone without IRA Army Council approval. He then founded a splinter paramilitary group, Saor Uladh ("Free Ulster") whose activities were largely confined to Kelly's home area in east Tyrone. The Easter following the formation of Saor Uladh, members of the organisation took control of Kellys home village of Pomeroy and held their own 1916 Rising commemoration; there were major confrontations between the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC), B-Specials and republicans. In 1953 he made a famous speech in Carrickmore which subsequently led to his arrest by the RUC; I will not give allegiance to the bastard queen of a bastard nation. Do I believe in force? The answer is yes. The more the better, the sooner the better..[2]
While in jail Kelly was elected, on a Anti-Partition ticket, as an abstentionist candidate for the Stormont constituency of Mid Tyrone at the 1953 Northern Ireland general election. Upon being released from jail he returned to his hometown of Pomeroy were a crowd of ten thousand had gathered to welcome him home..[3].
Kelly held this seat until the following general election, though - as an abstentionist - he never attended Stormont.
Fianna Uladh was founded in 1953, as the political wing of Saor Uladh. Fianna Uladh's basic ideology - which placed it closer to Clann na Poblachta than to the Sinn Féin of that era - was summed up by Kelly in a speech made in Seanad Éireann in 1954:
We in Fianna Uladh recognise the Constitution of the Republic of Ireland under which this State operates and we are prepared to work within its framework to extend its operation to the whole of Ireland. Recognising only the Constitution and the sovereignty of the Irish people, we naturally reject the claim of Britain and of any of her institutions to exercise sovereignty in any portion of Ireland. We decline to prostitute our nationality and our consciences by taking the Oath of Allegiance to the British Crown as a condition of parliamentary representation. 44 Seanad Debates col 346 (25 November 1954).
The element of rejecting British sovereignty in Ireland which was left unstated on that occasion was Saor Uladh's and Kelly's own personal involvement in acts of violence in Northern Ireland. Fianna Uladh's foundation - and its policy of abstentionism - helped to precipitate the break-up of the Anti-Partition of Ireland League in March 1954.
It was Kelly's association with Clann na Poblachta led to his nomination to the Seanad. In return for the Clann's support for the Second Inter-party Government (1954 - 1957), Taoiseach John A. Costello ensured that the votes of Fine Gael councillors elected Kelly to the Seanad (Labour Panel).
Kelly made one speech as a Senator, in support of a motion that all elected parliamentary representatives of the people of "the six occupied counties of Ireland" should be given a right of audience in the Dáil or in the Seanad: 44 Seanad Debates cols 344-50 (25 November 1954) and another brief intervention (in Irish) in a debate on the development and preservation of the Gaeltacht: 45 Seanad Debates cols 507-508 (2 November 1955). He was defeated at the 1957 Seanad general election.
Although later overshadowed by the IRA's Border Campaign (1956 - 1962) incidents such as Saor Uladh's attack on the RUC barracks in Rosslea, County Fermanagh, in which Volunteer Connie Green was killed, contributed to the fall of the Government and the 1957 general election. Costello's Government, although it decided against the re-introduction of internment, responded to the activities of Saor Uladh and the mainstream IRA by stepping up security measures against these groups, leading to the arrest of prominent republicans. In response to this and to a rapid deterioration in the state of the economy, Clann na Poblachta withdrew its support and Costello was left with no choice other than to call an election.
In 1959, Kelly moved to the United States, and by the 1970s he was the chair of the Republican Clubs organisation there.[4]
Kelly was an uncle of the IRA volunteer Patrick Kelly, a member of the East Tyrone Brigade, who was shot dead by British forces at Loughgall in 1987.
[edit] References
- ^ "North Ireland Legislator Joins Dublin Senate, Too", The New York Times, August 15, 1954, pp. 5.
- ^ www.iol.ie/~saoirse/2003/dec03.pdf
- ^ Martin Dillon, God and the Gun
- ^ Michael Farrell, Northern Ireland: The Orange State
- J. Bowyer Bell, The Secret Army: The IRA
[edit] External links
- http://www.proni.gov.uk/records/private/cahir_h.htm The Cahir Healy Papers (Public Record Office of Northern Ireland) (Last visited, 20 July 2006.)
- Maguire, John Internment, the IRA and the Lawless Case in Ireland: 1957-61 Journal of the Oxford University History Society, 2 (Michelmas 2004) pp 2-4. Available http://users.ox.ac.uk/~jouhs/michaelmas2004/maguire02.pdf (Last visited, 14 July 2006)
- Oireachtas Members Database - http://www.oireachtas.ie/members-hist/default.asp?housetype=1&HouseNum=8&MemberID=1414&ConstID=206 (Last visited 20 July 2006)
Parliament of Northern Ireland | ||
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Preceded by Edward McCullagh |
Member of Parliament for Mid Tyrone 1953 - 1958 |
Succeeded by Alexander Blevins |