Executive Council of the Irish Free State

The Executive Council (Irish: Ard-Chomhairle) was the cabinet and de facto executive branch of government of the 1922–1937 Irish Free State. Formally, the role of the Executive Council was to "aid and advise" the Governor-General who would exercise the executive authority on behalf of the King. In practice, however, it was the Council that governed, since the Governor-General was (with few exceptions) bound to act on its advice. The Executive Council included a prime minister called the President of the Executive Council and a deputy prime minister called the Vice-President. A member of the Council was called an executive minister,[1] as distinct from an extern minister who had charge of a department without being in the Council.

The President of the Executive Council was appointed by the Governor-General after being nominated by Dáil Éireann, the lower house of the Oireachtas (parliament), and the remaining Executive Ministers were nominated by the President. The Executive Council could also be removed by a vote of no confidence in the Dáil.

For formal and diplomatic purposes the description "His Majesty's Government in the Irish Free State" was sometimes used.

Overview

The Free State constitution provided that executive authority would be vested in the King and exercised by his Governor-General. However, under Article 51 this power was only exercisable "in accordance with the law, practice and constitutional usage governing the exercise of the Executive Authority in the case of the Dominion of Canada". In practice this meant that, as in Canada, the Governor-General was in most cases required to act on the advice of the Executive Council. Thus, it was the cabinet in which true authority lay. In addition to exercising the executive authority, the Executive Council, by advising the Governor-General, had the exclusive right to:

Once the President of the Executive Council had been appointed he nominated the Vice-President himself. The remaining cabinet ministers were also nominated by the President but had to be approved by a vote of consent in the Dáil. Initially the constitution provided that the Executive Council would consist of between five and seven ministers (not including its president) but under a constitutional amendment adopted in 1927 this maximum limit was increased to twelve. Similarly, initially it was required that all cabinet members hold seats in the Dáil, but an amendment in 1929 provided that one member could be a senator.

If the Executive Council ceased to "retain the support of a majority in Dáil Éireann" the entire cabinet was obliged to resign en masse, however they were permitted to remain in office as acting ministers until the appointment of successors. The fact that an Executive Council that had lost the confidence of the Dáil could not request a dissolution created the possibility of a political stalemate. It meant that if the Executive Council resigned after being defeated, and the Dáil could not agree on a new Council, a Catch-22 situation might be created, in which the inability of the Dáil to choose a cabinet could not be resolved by the holding of a general election. Unlike the modern Taoiseach of Ireland, the President of the Executive Council did not have authority to dismiss ministers individually. Rather, to dismiss a single member, the whole council had to be dismissed and reformed en bloc. Additionally, the President of the Council could not ask the Governor-General to dissolve the Dáil on his own initiative, but the Council as a whole had to do so. This meant that the position of the President was weaker than that of most modern prime ministers, and he was its chairman as much as he was its leader.

History

The Executive Council was established with the coming into force of the Free State constitution in 1922. It replaced two previous cabinets: the Aireacht of the Irish Republic and the Provisional Government. The Irish Free State had the status of a dominion of the British Commonwealth and the Irish Executive Council derived its name from organs of government found in other dominions. However it differed from the 'executive councils' of other nations. Firstly, it was a cabinet, whereas the Executive Councils of Australia and New Zealand each serve a role closer to that of a privy council. Secondly, whereas in the Free State the President of the Executive Council was the head of government, in Australia it is the Governor-General who is formally its president, although he need not attend all of its meetings. Contrary to the practice in New Zealand and Australia, the executive councils of the provinces of Canada are closer in role to the Free State cabinet, and are presided over by each province's premier.

As a result of the Constitution (Amendment No. 27) Act 1936, the office of Governor-General was abolished. For the remaining months of the Irish Free State the executive authority and a number of the Governor-General's other functions were exercised by the Executive Council directly, but in practice this change was merely symbolic. The Executive Council itself was replaced in 1937 by a new Cabinet, called simply the 'Government', established under the new Constitution of Ireland.

List of Executive Councils

Dáil Election/Year formed Council President Vice-President Party
3rd 1922 election 1st Executive Council W. T. Cosgrave Kevin O'Higgins Sinn Féin (Pro-Treaty wing)
4th 1923 election 2nd Executive Council Cumann na nGaedheal
5th 1927 (Jun) election 3rd Executive Council
6th 1927 (Sep) election 4th Executive Council Ernest Blythe
1930 5th Executive Council
7th 1932 election 6th Executive Council Éamon de Valera Seán T. O'Kelly Fianna Fáil
8th 1933 election 7th Executive Council
9th 1937 election 8th Executive Council

"His Majesty's Government in the Irish Free State"

W.T.Cosgrave, first head of the Government in the Irish Free State (standing, far-right), representing the Irish Free State at the 1926 Imperial Conference in London, along with King George V and the Prime Ministers of the United Kingdom, Canada, Newfoundland, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa.

The Irish Free State was a constitutional monarchy, initially one of the dominions within the British Empire (later the Commonwealth of Nations), whose monarch had the same title in all parts of the Empire and its territories, and the Free State government was sometimes referred to as His Majesty's Government in the Irish Free State.[2][3][4][5]

After the 1926 Imperial Conference, attended by Cosgrave as President of the Executive Council of the Irish Free State, the King's title was changed under the Royal and Parliamentary Titles Act 1927. The altered title, as proclaimed in London, replaced the words "...of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and..." with "...of Great Britain, Ireland and...". This change did not stop the Irish government using the description "His Majesty's Government in the Irish Free State" in agreements between the monarch's governments in the United Kingdom and in the Irish Free State, as in:

The description was also in regular official use between 1929 and 1934 in Notes published by HMSO, "in Regard to Commercial Relations" formally exchanged "Between His Majesty's Government in the Irish Free State" and foreign governments including the governments of:

and in other such Notes, including:

In a debate in the Dáil in December 1932, when de Valera was President, on a government motion to approve a trade agreement negotiated at the Ottawa Conference in August between the Irish Free State and the Dominion of Canada,[15] it was remarked that the Vice-President (Ernest Blythe) had signed the agreement “on behalf of His Majesty's Government in the Irish Free State.”[16] But the description went out of use at least by 1937, when the Constitution of Ireland came into effect as a result of de Valera's process of constitutional autochthony.[17] Any remaining vestige of the monarch's part in the constitution, or doubt about the person or office of the head of state, was removed when the state was finally declared to be a republic, as from 18 April 1949, under the Republic of Ireland Act 1948.

See also

References

  1. "Interpretation Act, 1923, Section 2". Irish Statute Book. Retrieved 3 June 2015.
  2. Development of Dominion Status 1900-1936 By Robert MacGregor Dawson. This presents on p.445 the text of official Dispatch from Secretary of State for Dominion Affairs to the Minister for External Affairs, Irish Free State, 9 April 1932 (Routledge, Rev Ed, Nov 1965. ISBN 071461467X)
  3. Ireland and the Vatican: The Politics and Diplomacy of Church-state By Dermot Keogh, p.86, note 17 (Cork University Press, New edition, Jan 1995. ISBN 0902561960)
  4. Cáipéisí Ar Pholasaí Eachtrach Na HÉireannRonan Fanning, pages 253, 254, 274 (3 of 35). Royal Irish Academy, 2002. ISBN 1874045968
  5. Irish political documents, 1916-1949, page 196. Arthur Mitchell, Pádraig Ó Snodaigh. Irish Academic Press, 1985.
  6. Registration and Control of Veterinary Surgeons
  7. Interpreting Article ten of the Articles of Agreement Note: Although "His Majesty's Government in the Irish Free State" does not appear in the title of this agreement, it appears several times in its text.
  8. Note HMG in IFS and Brazil
  9. Note HMG in IFS and Costa Rica
  10. Note HMG in IFS and Guatemala
  11. Note HMG in IFS and Roumania
  12. Note HMG in IFS and Salvador
  13. Reciprocal Recognition of Passenger Ships' Certificates
  14. Exchange of Notes, Government of Irish Free State and Egyptian Government, Cairo, 1930
  15. Motion: "That the Dáil approves of the Trade Agreement between the Irish Free State and the Dominion of Canada, signed at Ottawa on the 20th day of August, 1932, a copy of which was laid on the Table of the Dáil on the 13th day of October, 1932."
  16. Trade Agreement between the Irish Free State and Dominion of Canada. - Motion for Approval. 6 December 1932, Dáil Éireann Debate. Vol. 45 No. 6
  17. Kenneth Wheare, The Constitutional Structure of the Commonwealth (Clarendon Press, 1960), p.113, quoted in Reflections on the Australian Constitution edited by French, Lindell and Saunders, p. 56

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