Dublin Fingal (Dáil Éireann constituency)

Dublin Fingal
Dáil Éireann
Parliamentary Constituency
Future constituency
Created 2016
Seats 5
County council Fingal
EP constituency Dublin

Dublin Fingal is a parliamentary constituency which will be represented in Dáil Éireann, the lower house of the Irish parliament or Oireachtas, from the 2016 general election. The constituency elects 5 deputies (Teachtaí Dála, commonly known as TDs). The method of election is the single transferable vote form of proportional representation (PR-STV).

History and boundaries

The Constituency Commission proposed in its 2012 report that at the next general election a new constituency called Dublin Fingal be created.[1] The report proposed changes to the constituencies of Ireland so as to reduce the total number of TDs from 166 to 158.[2]

It was established by the Electoral (Amendment) (Dáil Constituencies) Act 2013.[3] The constituency incorporates all of Dublin North, Swords-Forrest and Kilsallaghan from Dublin West, and Balgriffin and Turnapin from Dublin North–East.

The 2013 Act defines the constituency as:[3]

"In the county of Fingal the electoral divisions of:
Balbriggan Rural, Balbriggan Urban, Ballyboghil, Balgriffin, Balscadden, Clonmethan, Donabate, Garristown, Hollywood, Holmpatrick, Kilsallaghan, Kinsaley, Lusk, Malahide East, Malahide West, Portmarnock North, Portmarnock South, Rush, Skerries, Swords-Forrest, Swords-Glasmore, Swords-Lissenhall, Swords-Seatown, Swords Village;
and those parts of the electoral divisions of Airport, Dubber and Turnapin situated north of a line drawn along the Northern Cross Route (M50), passing in a clockwise direction around and excluding roundabout No. 3 at the junction of the Northern Cross Route (M50) with the M1 motorway."

Elections

2016 general election

2016 general election: Dublin Fingal
Party Candidate % 1st Pref Count 1
Fianna Fáil Lorraine Clifford-Lee    
Independents 4 Change Clare Daly    
Independent Marcus de Brun    
Fine Gael Alan Farrell    
Independent Roslyn Fuller    
AAA–PBP Terry Kelleher    
Independents 4 Change Barry Martin    
Renua Ireland Gerry Molloy    
Independent Tony Murphy    
Fianna Fáil Darragh O'Brien    
Green Party Joe O'Brien    
Independent Fergal O'Connell    
Sinn Féin Louise O'Reilly    
Fine Gael James Reilly    
Labour Party Brendan Ryan    

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, February 13, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.