Fahy was first elected at the
1918 general election as a
Sinn Féin Member of Parliament (MP) for
Galway South, but as the party was pledged to
abstentionism he did not take his seat in the
British House of Commons and joined the revolutionary
First Dáil. He was re-elected as TD for
Galway in
1921 general election and having sided with the anti-treaty forces following the
Anglo-Irish Treaty, he did not take his seat in either the
3rd Dáil or the
4th Dáil. Referring to the treaty, in 1922 Fahy said: "Can a Treaty based on fear, naked and unashamed, be a sound basis for friendship between the two peoples?" He joined
Fianna Fáil when the party was founded in 1926, and along with the 42 other Fianna Fáil TDs he took his seat in the
5th Dáil on 12 August 1927, three days before the Dáil tied 71 votes to 71 on a
motion of no confidence in
W. T. Cosgrave's
Cumann na nGaedheal government (a tie broken by the
Ceann Comhairle). After the government won two by-elections later that month, it dissolved the Dáil, leading to a fresh election. After the
September 1927 election, Cosgrave was able to form a minority government with the support of the
Farmers' Party and some
independent TDs. However, in the
1932 general election, Fianna Fáil won just under half of the seats and formed a government with the support of the
Labour Party. The first business was of the
7th Dáil was the election of the
Ceann Comhairle, and on 9 March 1932 Fahy was nominated for the position by
Seán T. O'Kelly, winning the vote by a margin of 78 to 71. He held the post until Fianna Fáil lost the
1951 election, and at the start of the
14th Dáil he did not offer himself for re-election as Ceann Comhairle. He was succeeded by the Labour TD
Patrick Hogan. His 19 years in the chair remains the longest of any Ceann Comhairle, with the only other person to exceed 10 years as Ceann Comhairle being his successor, Patrick Hogan. The 1932 election was the last which Fahy contested; as Ceann Comhairle, he was automatically re-elected at the next seven elections. When his
Galway constituency was divided for the
1937 general election, he was returned unopposed for the new
Galway East, and similarly in
1948 for the new
Galway South constituency. Fahy died on 12 July 1953, and is buried at
Deans Grange Cemetery, Dublin. The
Galway South by-election held after his death was won by the Fianna Fáil candidate
Robert Lahiffe. File:Piece 201-001; Captain Frank Fahy, Irish Volunteers (1915-1918).pdf|page=18|Captain Frank Fahy, Irish Volunteers (1915–1918); Dublin Castle Records, CO 904/193-216 File:Piece 207-078 Frank Fahy (1922).pdf|alt=Frank Fahy; Easter Rising Records. WO 35/206-207|page=6|Frank Fahy; Easter Rising Records. WO 35/206-207 ==References==