The 'Northern Ireland Labour Party' was a political party which operated from
1924 until
1987.
In
1913 the
British Labour Party resolved to give the recently formed
Irish Labour Party exclusive organising rights in Ireland (the
1911 conference of the British party had been held in
Belfast). This decision was not popular with the
trade unions in Belfast, where skilled and organised workers tended to be
Protestant and broadly
Unionist (or at least anti-
Nationalist) in outlook.
After
partition the NILP was founded as a
socialist political party by groups including the
Belfast Labour Party and found its main bed of support amongst
working class voters in
Belfast. It initially declined to take a position on the "Border Question" and instead sought to offer itself as an alternative to both
nationalism and
unionism. It maintained relations with the British Labour Party who did not allow membership or organisation in Northern Ireland until
2004.
The party had a
Member of Parliament on only one occasion, when
Jack Beattie won the
Belfast West by-election, 1943.
In
1949, after
Ireland (Éire) had become the
Republic of Ireland, the Northern Ireland Labour Party's conference voted in favour of the Union with
Great Britain. The result was a sharp decline in the party's already limited electoral success as Catholic voters deserted it and the Irish Labour Party attempted to organise in Northern Ireland. An earlier refusal to adopt this policy had split the party with leader
Harry Midgely forming his own strongly Unionist
Commonwealth Labour Party.
Later in the 1950s the party began to gain ground amongst unionist voters, and after the break up of the Irish Labour Party's new attempts to organise in Northern Ireland, amongst some nationalists, and saw its greatest period of success between
1958 and
1965. Success came despite continued divisions, over such matters as
Sunday Observance - two NILP Belfast councillors voted to close the city's park playgrounds on Sundays (as demanded by hard line
Calvinists but opposed by Catholics) and were expelled as a result. As late as
1969 the party and its associates could poll over 100,000 votes on the basis of its cross community pull.
However with the onset of
the Troubles, new parties emerged that appealed to the party's support base, including the
Social Democratic and Labour Party, the
Alliance Party of Northern Ireland and the
Democratic Unionist Party. Once again the polarisation of politics around partition deprived the party of a critical mass.
In
1971 the new
Prime Minister of Northern Ireland Brian Faulkner appointed the Northern Ireland Labour Party
Stormont MP
David Bleakley to his Cabinet as Minister of Community Relations, in an attempt to bring reforms to the province. However, the following year the Stormont Parliament was suspended when it resisted the
London government request to take over responsibility for public order. In the
1973 referendum on the province's future, the Northern Ireland Labour Party campaigned for the province to remain in the
United Kingdom.
The Northern Ireland Labour Party continued to contest elections but with a dwindling support base. In
1987 the remains of the party formed the
Labour '87 group in the campaign for the
British Labour Party to organise in Northern Ireland.
Leaders of the Northern Ireland Labour Party
★ 1925 - 29:
Samuel Kyle
★ ?:
Jack Beattie
★ 1933 - 38:
Harry Midgley
★ 1942 - 43:
Jack Beattie
★ 1958 - 69:
Tom Boyd