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List of female members of the House of Commons of Northern Ireland

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Parliament Buildings in Stormont, Belfast, where the House of Commons of Northern Ireland met from 1932 to 1972

The House of Commons of Northern Ireland was the lower chamber of the bicameral Parliament of Northern Ireland. The Parliament was created under the Government of Ireland Act 1920,[1] and first met after a general election held on 24 May 1921.[2] Parliament was suspended on 30 March 1972,[1] when the Northern Ireland (Temporary Provisions) Act 1972 imposed direct rule from London, and was formally abolished on 18 July 1973 under the Northern Ireland Constitution Act 1973.[1]

The House of Commons had 52 members, known as MPs. They were elected by single transferable vote (STV) in the 1921 and 1925 elections, and from 1929 onwards by first-past-the-post, except for the 4-seat Queen's University of Belfast constituency which retained STV until its abolition in 1969.[1]

History

A total of nine women[fn 1] were elected to the Commons in its 51-year existence,[3] serving for an average of eight and a half years. On average the Commons had two women MPs at any one time, falling to one from 1925 to 1933 and after 1969, and peaking from 1949 to 1958 at four MPs (7.7% of the House's 52 MPs).

Four of the nine women were elected by the Queen's University of Belfast constituency, including the lawyer Sheelagh Murnaghan (1961–1969). She was the only woman elected at a contested by-election[4] (in November 1961[5][6]), and also the only member of the Ulster Liberal Party ever elected to the Parliament of Northern Ireland.[7] Two of the women (Irene Calvert and Eileen M. Hickey) were independent politicians, both elected by Queen's.

The remaining six were all members of the Ulster Unionist Party,[8] which had a majority of seats throughout the Parliament's existence. Women had played an important role in Ulster unionist resistance to Irish Home rule, but after achieving Northern Ireland's continued place in the United Kingdom, the new province was predominantly governed by men.[9] (A similar process happened in the southern part of the newly-partitioned Ireland. Women had played a crucial part in the struggle for independence, but the politics of the new Irish Free State were male-dominated.[10][11])

No explicitly nationalist women were elected to Stormont,[12] although Eileen Hickey is sometimes labelled as a nationalist.[13][14] The abolition of STV in 1929 had, as intended, made it harder for any nationalist to win a seat in most of Northern Ireland;[12] but after the death in 1934 of Joseph Devlin, a lack of unity among nationalists compounded their difficulties.[12] Nationalist women were further hindered by the decline in the 1930s of Cumann na mBan, which collapsed in the early 1940s leaving nationalist and republican women with little effective organisation.[12] Bernadette Devlin's candidacy at the 1969 general election in South Londonderry was the closest any nationalist woman came to winning a seat, when she won nearly 40% of the votes[15] in a seat which had been contested only once (in 1949) since its creation in 1929.[16]

The nine women included two Roman Catholics: the Liberal Sheelagh Murnaghan[7] and the independent Eileen M. Hickey,[17] both elected by Queen's.

Prime Minister James Craig was explicit about the main purpose of abolishing STV: to prevent the emergence of non-sectarian class politics, and force voters to make a binary choice between supporters and opponents of the union with Great Britain.[18] This was largely successful: the Northern Ireland Labour Party (NILP), which had won three seats in 1925, never made a breakthrough. Even in 1962, when NILP won 26% of the votes, it won only four seats.[19] Under STV in 1925, a 4.7% vote share had won NILP three seats.[19] NILP had established a women's section in 1924, but it collapsed in the early 1930s.[12] No women were elected as NILP MPs.

Impact of women MPs

In the first Parliament, unionist Julia McMordie (1921–1925) was notable for her support of women officers in the Royal Ulster Constabulary. She did not advocate equal pay for women, but did support equal allowances and provisions.[20]

In the 1940s and 1950s, the independent Irene Calvert (1945–1953) secured reforms to education and child welfare laws.[21] In the 1950s, the Unionist Dinah McNabb (1945–1969) campaigned against greyhound racing on Sundays. In the 1960s, McNabb was a strident opponent of the development in her constituency of the new town of Craigavon, and of the compensation rates for farmers whose land was compulsorily purchased.[22]

The Liberal Sheelagh Murnaghan's time in Stormont was notable for her introduction in 1964 of a Human Rights Bill which would have outlawed discrimination on grounds of religion or gender, and established a commission to enforce the ban.[7][23] The bill was defeated, as were her three further attempts with modified versions of the bill in 1965 and twice in 1967.[24][23] In the 1999 the Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission was established as a component of the Good Friday Agreement which brought an end to The Troubles; the Commission's first Chief Commissioner Brice Dickson described Murnaghan as having "planted a seed".[25]

By far the most significant woman[12] in the House of Commons of Northern Ireland was its longest-serving woman MP, the unionist Dehra Parker (1921–1929, 1933–1960), with a total of 35 years of service.[12] Known as Dehra Chichester until her second marriage in 1928, she and Julia McMordie were the only women returned in the first Parliament in 1921.[26] Parker stood down at the 1929 general election, when her son-in-law James Lenox-Conyngham Chichester-Clark won a seat, and went to live in England with her new husband. On James's death in 1933, she was elected unopposed in his place, and held the seat until her resignation in 1960, when her grandson (James Chichester-Clark) was elected unopposed to succeed her. James was later Prime Minister of Northern Ireland, succeeding another of Dehra's grandsons, Terence O'Neill.[27]

From 1937 to 1944, Parker was Parliamentary Secretary (junior minister) to the Ministry of Education.[27] One of her civil servants in that office, J.A. Oliver, described her as an "adroit politician and a formidable operator".[27] She was the only woman to serve in the then cabinet of Northern Ireland (the Executive Committee of the Privy Council of Northern Ireland), as Minister of Health and Local Government from 1949 to 1957.[12]

List

Name Party Constituency Elected Left office Born Died Age
when first elected
Julia McMordie[20] Ulster Unionist Belfast South 1921[2] 1925[28] 30 March 1860 12 April 1942 61
Dehra Chichester / Dehra Parker[29] Ulster Unionist Londonderry 1921[30] 1929[29] 13 August 1882 30 November 1963 40
South Londonderry 1933[31] Resigned 1960[29] 51
Margaret Waring[32] Ulster Unionist Iveagh 1929[33] 1933[34] 14 November 1887 9 May 1968 41
Irene Calvert[35] Independent Queen's University 1945[36] 1953[37] 10 February 1909 19 May 2000 36
Dinah McNabb[38] Ulster Unionist North Armagh 1945 1969 ?? ?? ??
Eileen M. Hickey[39] Independent Queen's University 1949[40] 1958[41] 1886 3 February 1960 63
Elizabeth Maconachie[39] Ulster Unionist Queen's University 1953[42] 1969[43] ?? ?? ??
Sheelagh Murnaghan[44] Ulster Liberal Queen's University 1961 by-election[45] 1969 6 May 1924 14 September 1993 45
Anne Dickson[46] Ulster Unionist Carrick 1969[47] 1972[fn 2] 18 April 1928 Living 40

Timeline

Anne DicksonSheelagh MurnaghanElizabeth MaconachieEileen M. HickeyDinah McNabbIrene CalvertMargaret WaringDehra ParkerJulia McMordie

Notes

  1. ^ Some sources (e.g. Taillon & Urquhart 2002, p. 354) wrongly assert the total as ten women, by including Bernadette Devlin as a Stormont MP. Devlin was elected at a by-election in April 1969 to the House of Commons of the United Kingdom in Westminster, but did not win a seat at Stormont when she stood against James Chichester-Clark in South Londonderry at the Northern Ireland general election on 24 February 1969.
  2. ^ Technically, Anne Dickson and the other members of the Parliament of Northern Ireland remained members after the Parliament was suspended on 30 March 1972. However, the suspension was never revoked before the Parliament was abolished in 1973, so the de facto end of Dickson's term was in 1972.

References

  1. ^ a b c d Walker 1992, p. 43.
  2. ^ a b Walker 1992, p. 45.
  3. ^ McNamara & Mooney 2000, pp. 221–230.
  4. ^ Walker 1992, p. 45–83.
  5. ^ "News in Brief: University seat". The Times. London. 1 November 1961. p. 5. Retrieved 26 January 2018 – via Times digital archive.
  6. ^ "News in Brief: Woman Liberal wins N. Ireland seat". The Times. London. 25 November 1961. p. 5. Retrieved 26 January 2018 – via Times digital archive.
  7. ^ a b c "Sheelagh Murnaghan". The Times. London. 18 September 1993. p. 17. Retrieved 27 January 2018 – via Times digital archive.
  8. ^ McNamara & Mooney 2000, pp. 221–232.
  9. ^ Ward 2005, p. 162–163.
  10. ^ Galligan & Buckley 2017, p. 1992.
  11. ^ McNamara & Mooney 2000, p. 16.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h Taillon & Urquhart 2002, p. 354.
  13. ^ Norton 2014, p. 130.
  14. ^ Bogdanor 2001, p. 78.
  15. ^ Walker 1992, p. 81.
  16. ^ Walker 1992, p. 51–81.
  17. ^ Walker 2012, p. 59.
  18. ^ Bogdanor 2001, p. 77–79.
  19. ^ a b Edwards 2009, p. 72.
  20. ^ a b McNamara & Mooney 2000, p. 223.
  21. ^ McNamara & Mooney 2000, pp. 225–226.
  22. ^ Moriarty-Lempke 1999, p. 27.
  23. ^ a b Dickson 2011, p. 16.
  24. ^ McNamara & Mooney 2000, pp. 229.
  25. ^ Dickson 2011, p. 17.
  26. ^ McNamara & Mooney 2000, pp. 221.
  27. ^ a b c McNamara & Mooney 2000, pp. 222.
  28. ^ Walker 1992, p. 47.
  29. ^ a b c McNamara & Mooney 2000, pp. 221–222.
  30. ^ Walker 1992, p. 46.
  31. ^ Walker 1992, p. 52.
  32. ^ McNamara & Mooney 2000, pp. 224.
  33. ^ Walker 1992, p. 51.
  34. ^ Walker 1992, p. 53.
  35. ^ McNamara & Mooney 2000, pp. 225–6.
  36. ^ Walker 1992, p. 61.
  37. ^ Walker 1992, pp. 64, 68.
  38. ^ McNamara & Mooney 2000, p. 226.
  39. ^ a b McNamara & Mooney 2000, p. 227.
  40. ^ Walker 1992, p. 64.
  41. ^ Walker 1992, pp. 68, 71.
  42. ^ Walker 1992, p. 71.
  43. ^ Walker 1992, p. 74,77.
  44. ^ McNamara & Mooney 2000, pp. 228–9.
  45. ^ Walker 1992, p. 72.
  46. ^ McNamara & Mooney 2000, p. 232.
  47. ^ Walker 1992, p. 80.

Bibliography

This page was last edited on 17 November 2023, at 11:52
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