The 'Second Dáil' was
Dáil Éireann as it convened from
16 August,
1921 until
8 June,
1922. From 1919–1922 Dáil Éireann was the revolutionary parliament of the self-proclaimed
Irish Republic. The Second Dáil consisted of members elected in 1921. One of its most important acts was to bring an end to the
War of Independence by ratifying the controversial
Anglo-Irish Treaty.
Elections of 1921
''See
Irish elections, 1921''
In 1920, in the middle of the Anglo-Irish War, the British Government passed the
Government of Ireland Act. This was intended to find a solution to the "Irish problem" by partitioning
Ireland into two parts, each of which would have a separate
home rule parliament. In 1921 the
first elections were held to these new bodies. The general election created the
House of Commons of Northern Ireland, and the
House of Commons of Southern Ireland. In both jurisdictions the electoral system used was the
single transferable vote.
Sinn Féin nationalists participated in these elections but refused to recognise the new home rule parliaments. Instead the party treated the elections in both parts of Ireland as elections to the Second Dáil. Thus the Second Dáil theoretically consisted of members elected in both parts of Ireland.
The general election to the
Northern Ireland House of Commons occurred on
24 May. Of 52 seats, forty were won by
Unionists, six by moderate nationalists and six by Sinn Féin. No actual polling took place in
Southern Ireland as all 128 candidates were returned unopposed. Of these, 124 were won by Sinn Féin and four by independent Unionists representing the
University of Dublin (Trinity College). Only Sinn Féin candidates recognised the Dáil and five of these had been elected in two constituencies, one in each part of Ireland, so the total number of members who assembled in the Second Dáil was 125.
[1]
The Treaty
During the Second Dáil the Irish Republic and the British Government of
Lloyd George agreed to hold peace negotiations. As
President of Dáil Éireann Éamon de Valera was the highest official in the Republic at this time but was notionally only the
head of government. In August 1921, in order to strengthen his side's hand the in negotiations, he had the Second Dáil amend the Republic's brief
Dáil Constitution to grant him the title ''
President of the Republic''. The purpose of this change was to impress upon the British the Republican belief that the negotiations were between two sovereign states with delegates accredited by their respective heads of state: the British king and the Irish president.
On
14 September,
1921 the Dáil ratified the appointment of
Arthur Griffith,
Michael Collins,
Robert Barton,
Eamonn Duggan and
George Gavan Duffy as envoys plenipotentiary for the peace conference in England. Of the five only Collins, Griffith and Barton were members of the cabinet. These envoys eventually signed the Anglo-Irish Treaty on
6 December. After almost a month of acrimonious debate the treaty was formally ratified by Dáil Éireann on
7 January,
1922. The 'Treaty Debates' should also be seen as the first publicly reported debate on what
Sinn Féin felt that it had achieved and could achieve. The vote went 64 in favour to 57 against. In the vote the deputies who represented more than one constituency were each only permitted to vote once.
To satisfy the requirements of the British constitution, the treaty also had to be ratified by the House of Commons of Southern Ireland. Thus Irish nationalists ended their boycott of the home rule parliament to attend the southern House of Commons as
MPs. This they did alongside the four Unionist MPs who had refused to recognise the Dáil. In this way the treaty was ratified a second time in Dublin.
Under the terms of the Anglo-Irish Treaty a provisional parliament, considered by nationalists to be the
Third Dáil, was elected in the
Irish general election, 1922, on
16 June. Collins and de Valera agreed a pact between the pro- and anti-Treaty wings of Sinn Féin and this pact and the elections were endorsed by the Second Dáil.
[1] The new assembly was recognised both by nationalists and the British Government and so replaced both the
Parliament of Southern Ireland and the Second Dáil with a single body.
The Second Dáil in post-Treaty Republican tradition
Main articles: Irish republican legitimatism
Within Irish republicanism there is a minor current of thought which argues that the Second Dáil continued to exist after the establishment of the
Irish Free State. This assembly subsequently transferred its authority to the
IRA Army Council in 1938.
Footnote
1. The five TDs (MPs) elected for two constituencies were Michael Collins, Eamon de Valera, Arthur Griffith, Sean Milroy and Eoin MacNeill.
See also
★
Members of the 2nd Dáil
★
History of Ireland
★
First Dáil
External links
★
Historical Dáil debates from official
Oireachtas website
★
Treaty debates on-line copyright University College Cork