West Cork | |
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Former County constituency | |
for the House of Commons | |
1885–1922 | |
Number of members | One |
Created from | County Cork |
East Cork, a division of County Cork, was a parliamentary constituency in Ireland, represented in the Parliament of the United Kingdom. From 1885 to 1922 it returned one Member of Parliament (MP) to the House of Commons of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.
Until the 1885 general election the area was part of the Cork County constituency. From 1922 it was not represented in the Parliament of the United Kingdom UK Parliament, as it was no longer in the UK.
Contents |
This constituency comprised the western part of County Cork.
Election | Member | Party | |
---|---|---|---|
1885 | James Gilhooly | Irish Parliamentary Party | |
1891 | Anti-Parnellite | ||
1900 | Irish Parliamentary Party | ||
1910 | All-for-Ireland League | ||
1916 by-election | Daniel O'Leary | Irish Parliamentary Party | |
1918 | Seán Hayes | Sinn Féin | |
1922 | constituency abolished |
During World War I the major political parties observed an electoral truce and most elections were uncontested with the incumbent party nominating a successor who was returned unopposed. Unusually, when Gilhooly died, the seat was contested by three candidates none of whom had official recognition from the Irish Nationalist political organisations but all of whom supported the broad Nationalist agenda. The by-election has its place in history as the first after the Easter Rising, the last in which the Irish Parliamentary Party captured a seat, the effective self-inflicted demise of the All-for-Ireland League and, in general, a pivotal point in the transition from one era to another. It was also the last great clash between the political rivals William O'Brien's All-for-Ireland League and John Redmond's Irish Parliamentary Party.
15 November 1916 (by-election) | ||
Candidate | Party | Votes |
---|---|---|
Daniel O'Leary | Redmondite1 | 1806 |
Frank J. Healy | O'Brienite2 | 1750 |
Dr. Michael B. Shipsey | Independent Nationalist3 | 370 |
1O'Leary had pledged to join the Irish Parliamentary Party and was a supporter of John Redmond. However, the official Nationalists' organisation (the United Irish League) had withheld approval of his candidacy.
2Healy was imprisoned in Frongoch internment camp for supposedly being associated with Sinn Féin, but Sinn Féin repudiated his candidacy for not revoking to take his seat at Westminster, instead had been supported by William O'Brien, who was leader of the All-for-Ireland League.
3Shipsey was a local member of the All-for-Ireland League who stood in protest against William O'Brien's adoption of an unofficial candidate.[1]
The 1916 by-election, which contrasted so obviously with Gilhooly's long tenure of the seat, was viewed as a farce by Unionist opinion.[2]
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