- Abstentionism
Abstentionism is standing for
election to adeliberative assembly while refusing to take up any seats won or otherwise participate in the assembly's business. Abstentionism differs from anelection boycott in that abstentionists participate in the election itself. Abstentionism has been used by Irish nationalist political movements in theUnited Kingdom andIreland since the early 19th century.In Ireland
After the
Act of Union 1800 , Ireland was represented at Westminster in the House of Commons of theUnited Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland . Repeal of the Act of Union was a goal of many Irish nationalists.Fact|date=February 2008In 1845, a motion was carried at the
Repeal Association 's committee for all Irish MPs to withdraw from Westminster. It was proposed by Thomas Osborne Davis of theYoung Ireland movement. However, the committee felt MPs already sitting could not withdraw without breaking theoath of office they had taken upon election. [] TheIrish Confederation , which withrew from the Repeal Association in 1847, resolved in favour of immediate abstention. However,William Smith O'Brien , its founder, continued to speak at Westminster. [Davis, p.122] In 1848Charles Gavan Duffy proposed that Irish MPs expelled from Westminster should sit in a separate Irish parliament. [Davis, p.256]Other early abstentionist advocates included
George Sigerson in 1862, andJohn Dillon in 1878, who envisaged abstentionist Irish MPs meeting in a separate Irish parliament.]From the 1860s,
Irish Republican Brotherhood leadersCharles Kickham and John O'Leary favoured abstentionism. [] In 1869, G.H. Moore suggested nominating imprisoned republicans for election, knowing they were precluded as convicted felons from taking seats. [McGee, pg. 43] On this basis,Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa (in 1870) andJohn Mitchel (twice in 1875) were returned at by-elections in Tipperary; O'Donovan Rossa was in prison at his election, while Mitchel was in exile.Kickham envisaged a "great national conference" calling on Irish MPs to withdraw from Westminster. A motion proposed by Charles Doran to that effect was passed at the convention of the
Home Rule League (HRL). [McGee, pg.48]
"Honest" John Martin, "independent nationalist" MP for Meath 1871-75, spoke in Westminster only to raise nationalist protests, and refused to vote. [McGee, pg. 42-43] In the 1874 election, 59 HRL MPs were returned, includingJohn O'Connor Power in Mayo, who was a member of the IRB Supreme Council. He was to fall out with the IRB over allegations of misappropriating election funds, [McGee, p.49-50] and became progressively less radical. By 1876, it was clear that the HRL would never be able to organise a national convention, and MPs elected with its endorsement would remain at Westminster. [McGee, p.53] An alternative to abstentionism wasobstructionism by makingfilibuster s. This was practised by the HRL and its successor, theIrish Parliamentary Party underCharles Stuart Parnell from the late 1870s.inn Féin
Arthur Griffith 's "Sinn Féin Policy", formulated 1905–07, called for Irish MPs to abstain from Westminster and sit in a parallel parliament inDublin . The first Sinn Féin abstentionist candidate wasCharles Nolan in 1908. Having sat as MP for North Leitrim for theIrish Parliamentary Party , he resigned after joining Sinn Féin, and lost the ensuing by-election. The first abstentionist MP elected was CountGeorge Noble Plunkett after the North Roscommon by-election of3 February 1917 . [Lydon, p.343.]In 1919,
Sinn Féin Members of Parliament (MPs) elected in 1918 to theParliament of the United Kingdom refused to sit in that body and instead constituted themselves as the first "Dáil", which was claimed to be the legitimateparliament of theIrish Republic . One strand within Republicanism, in remaining loyal to this pre-Partition Irish Republic, denies the legitimacy of both theRepublic of Ireland andNorthern Ireland . Other parties reached accommodation with the southern state but not Northern Ireland. Some groups have boycotted elections within either jurisdiction; others have been abstentionist; others abstained from some bodies but not others. Abstentionism has often been a divisive issue within Republicanism.Anti-Treaty Sinn Féin abstained from the first (1923-27) Dáil of theIrish Free State .Fianna Fáil split from Sinn Féin in 1927 and abandoned abstentionism in the Free State, but for a time contested elections to theParliament of Northern Ireland at Stormont and abstained.In 1955, Sinn Féin contested local elections in the Republic of Ireland and took its seats.
In 1970, at its
Ard Fheis (annual conference), Sinn Féin split again on the issue of whether or not to reverse its long-standing policy of refusing to taking seats inDáil Éireann . The split created "Official Sinn Féin " (later Sinn Féin the Workers Party - SFWP) and the abstentionist "Provisional Sinn Féin" (PSF). Sinn Féin the Workers Party won a seat in the Dáil in 1981. It later dropped Sinn Féin from its name to become "The Workers Party", so that PSF became simply "Sinn Féin".Sinn Féin adopted the "
armalite and ballot box strategy " in 1981, and first contested modern elections in Northern Ireland with the 1982 Assembly elections which they abstained from. They also abstained from theNorthern Ireland Forum . They adopted non-abstentionist policies for elections to local authorities (next held in 1985) and to the European Parliament.Another split occurred in 1986, on the same issue, leading again to two parties - Sinn Féin, led by
Gerry Adams , andRepublican Sinn Féin (RSF), led byRuairí Ó Brádaigh . Sinn Féin's first sittingTeachta Dála wasCaoimhghín Ó Caoláin in Cavan-Monaghan in 1997.RSF has retained the policy of abstentionism from both Dáil Éireann and the
Northern Ireland Assembly . RSF has not in fact contested elections for Dáil Éireann or Westminster. It is not a registered party in Northern Ireland, but members have contested the Assembly elections as independents.In Northern Ireland
After Partition, most non-abstentionist parties in the southern state did not organise at all in Northern Ireland.
The Nationalist Party did not take their seats during the first Stormont parliament (1921-25). Despite forming the second-largest
parliamentary party , they did not accept the role of Opposition for a further forty years. They did so on2 February 1965 but withdrew from opposition again in October 1968, two weeks after police batonned demonstrators at a civil rights march inDerry on5 October 1968 . [Brendan Lynn (1979), "Holding the Ground: The Nationalist Party in Northern Ireland, 1945-1972" ISBN 1 85521 980 8. ( [http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/issues/politics/docs/lynn97.htm CAIN Web Service] )]The
Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) became the Opposition on its formation on21 August 1970 but that party withdrew from Stormont in July 1971. The SDLP participated in the assembly set up for theSunningdale Agreement , and in the Constitutional Convention. However, they abstained from the 1982 Assembly, and their participation in theNorthern Ireland Forum was intermittent.Since the establishment of the
Northern Ireland Assembly under theGood Friday Agreement , both the SDLP and Sinn Féin have taken their seats in that body. SDLP MPs have consistently taken their seats in theWestminster parliament, in contrast to Sinn Féin MPs who refuse to take their seats there, as they refuse to recognise that body's right to legislate for any part of Ireland.Fianna Fáil registered as a political party within Northern Ireland in 2007. It hss not made clear whether it will contest elections to Westminster.
ee also
*
Irish republican legitimatism
*Obstructionism
*Oath of Allegiance (UK)
*Oath of Allegiance (Ireland)
*Disappearing quorum References
External links
*cite web |url=http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/issues/abstentionism/index.html |title=Abstentionism: Sinn Féin Ard Fheis, 1-2 November 1986 - Menu Page |publisher=
Conflict Archive on the Internet |accessdate=2008-01-14
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