The 'Prime Minister of Northern Ireland' was the
de facto head of the Government of
Northern Ireland. No such office was provided for in the ''
Government of Ireland Act 1920''.
[1] However the
Lord Lieutenant,
[2] as with
Governors-General in other
Westminister Systems such as in
Canada, chose to appoint someone to head the
executive even though no such post existed in
statute law. The office-holder assumed the title ''Prime Minister'' to draw parallels with the
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. On the advice of the new Prime Minister, the Lord Lieutenant then created the ''Department of the Prime Minister''.
[3] The office of Prime Minister of Northern Ireland was abolished in 1972, along with the
Stormont government, when direct rule of Northern Ireland was returned to London.
The ''Government of Ireland Act'' provided for the appointment of the Executive Committee of the Privy Council by the Governor.
[4] No parliamentary vote was required. Nor, theoretically, was the Executive Committee and its prime minister ''responsible'' to the
House of Commons of Northern Ireland. In reality the Governor chose the leader of the party with a majority in the House to form a government. Invariably this was the leader of the
Ulster Unionist Party, such was the UUP's electoral dominance.
The Prime Minister's residence from 1920 until 1922 was
Cabin Hill, later to become the junior school for
Campbell College. After 1922
Stormont Castle was used, though some prime ministers chose to live in
Stormont House, the unused residence of the Speaker of the House of Commons. All six Prime Ministers of Northern Ireland were members of the
Orange Order.
A new office of '
First Minister of Northern Ireland' was created by the
Belfast Agreement in
1998. In contrast with the majoritarianism of the earlier
Stormont regime, the new power-sharing assembly operates on the principles of
consociational democracy.
Prime Ministers of Northern Ireland
| # | Name | Took Office | Left Office | Party |
|---|
| 1. | Sir James Craig | June 7, 1921 | November 24, 1940 (death) | Unionist Party |
| 2. | John Miller Andrews | November 27, 1940 | May 1, 1943 | Unionist Party |
| 3. | Viscount Brookeborough | May 1, 1943 | March 26, 1963 | Unionist Party |
| 4. | Terence O'Neill | March 25, 1963 | May 1, 1969 | Unionist Party |
| 5. | James Chichester-Clark | May 1, 1969 | March 23, 1971 | Unionist Party |
| 6. | Brian Faulkner | March 23, 1971 | March 30, 1972 | Unionist Party |
Footnotes
Sources
★ Alan J. Ward, ''The Irish Constitutional Tradition'' (Irish Academic Press, 1994)
★
Government of Ireland Act, 1920