Northern Ireland The
Parliament of Northern Ireland came into being in June 1921. Northern Ireland itself is considered to have been established on 3 May 1921 - the date on which the Government of Ireland Act came into force. The first meetings of the Parliament of Northern Ireland were held at Belfast City Hall. At its inauguration, in
Belfast City Hall, King
George V made a famous appeal for Anglo-Irish and north–south reconciliation. The speech, drafted by the government of
David Lloyd George on recommendations from
Jan Smuts Prime Minister of the
Union of South Africa, with the enthusiastic backing of the King, opened the door for formal contact between the
British Government and the
Republican administration of
Éamon de Valera. Though it was superseded in large part, its repeal remained a matter of controversy until accomplished in the 1990s (under the provisions of the 1998
Good Friday Agreement).
Southern Ireland All 128 MPs elected to the
House of Commons of Southern Ireland in the
May 1921 elections were returned unopposed; 124 of them, representing
Sinn Féin, declared themselves
TDs (
Teachtaí Dála,
Irish for
Dáil Deputies) and assembled as the
Second Dáil of the
Irish Republic. With only the four
Independent Unionist MPs, who had been elected for the
Dublin University constituency and fifteen appointed senators turning up for the state opening of the
Parliament of Southern Ireland at the Royal College of Science in Dublin (now
Government Buildings) in June 1921, the new legislature was suspended. Southern Ireland was ruled, for the time being, directly from London as it had been before the Government of Ireland Act. The
Provisional Government of the Irish Free State was constituted on 14 January 1922 "at a meeting of members of the Parliament elected for constituencies in Southern Ireland". That meeting was not convened as a meeting of the
House of Commons of Southern Ireland nor as a meeting of the
Dáil. Instead, it was convened by
Arthur Griffith as "Chairman of the Irish Delegation of Plenipotentiaries" (who had signed the
Anglo-Irish Treaty) under the terms of the Treaty.
Elections in June 1922 were followed by the meeting of the
Third Dáil, which worked as a
Constituent Assembly to draft a
constitution for the
Irish Free State. For the purposes of British law the constitution was confirmed by the
Irish Free State Constitution Act 1922; the new state then came into being on 6 December 1922.
Consequences The Treaty provided for the ability of Northern Ireland's Parliament, by formal address, to opt out of the new
Irish Free State, which as expected, the
Parliament of Northern Ireland brought into effect on 7 December 1922 (the day after the establishment of the Irish Free State). An
Irish Boundary Commission was set up to redraw the border between the new
Irish Free State and Northern Ireland, but it remained unchanged in return for financial concessions and the British and Irish governments agreed to suppress its report. In regards to the possible loss of territory due to the Boundary Commission's findings, on 25 January 1922
James Craig, the 1st
Prime Minister of Northern Ireland stated: ""I will never give in to any re-arrangement of the boundary that leaves our Ulster area less than it is under the Government of Ireland Act" The newly formed Government of Northern Ireland refused to appoint a representative to the Boundary Commission. The
Council of Ireland never functioned as hoped (as an embryonic all-Ireland parliament), as the new governments decided to find a better mechanism in January 1922. In consequence of the establishment of the Irish Free State, the British parliament passed the
Irish Free State (Consequential Provisions) Act 1922, which made a number of adjustments to Northern Ireland's system of government as set up by the 1920 act. Most notably, the office of Lord Lieutenant was abolished, being replaced by the new office of
Governor of Northern Ireland. == Repeal ==