Passage of Home Rule, 1910–1914 march through Belfast, 1914 As a minority party after 1910 elections, the Liberals depended on the Irish vote, controlled by
John Redmond. To gain Irish support for the budget and the parliament bill, Asquith promised Redmond that
Irish Home Rule would be the highest priority. It proved much more complex and time-consuming than expected. Support for self-government for Ireland had been a tenet of the Liberal Party since 1886, but Asquith had not been as enthusiastic, stating in 1903 (while in opposition) that the party should not form a government which depended on the Irish Nationalist Party for its existence. After 1910, though, Irish Nationalist votes were required to stay in power. Retaining Ireland in the Union was the declared intent of all parties, and the Nationalists, as part of the majority that kept Asquith in office, were entitled to seek enactment of their plans for Home Rule, and to expect Liberal and Labour support. The Conservative and Unionist Party, with die-hard support from the Protestant
Orange Order, strongly opposed Home Rule. The desire to retain a veto for the Lords on such bills had been an unbridgeable gap between the parties in the constitutional talks prior to the second 1910 election. The cabinet committee (not including Asquith) which in 1911 planned the
Third Home Rule Bill opposed any special status for Protestant Ulster within majority-Catholic Ireland. Asquith later (in 1913) wrote to
Winston Churchill, stating that the Prime Minister had always believed and stated that the price of Home Rule should be a special status for Ulster. In spite of this, the bill as introduced in April 1912 contained no such provision, and applied to all Ireland. Neither partition nor a special status for Ulster was likely to satisfy either side. The self-government offered by the bill was very limited, but Irish Nationalists, expecting Home Rule to come by gradual parliamentary steps, favoured it. The Conservatives and Irish Unionists opposed it. Unionists began preparing to get their way by force if necessary, prompting nationalist reciprocation. The Unionists were generally better financed and more organised. In April 1914 the
Ulster Volunteers smuggled in 25,000 rifles and bayonets and over 3 million rounds of ammunition purchased from Germany. As the crisis deepened, with the Ulster Volunteers drilling openly, Churchill arranged for a
Royal Navy squadron to cruise off Belfast without first raising the issue in Cabinet. It appeared to the Unionist leaders that Churchill and his friend, War Secretary
John Seely, were seeking to provoke the Unionists into an act that would allow Ulster to be placed under some form of military rule. Asquith cancelled the move two days later.
Parliament Act There had been an overwhelming Conservative-Unionist majority in the Lords after the Liberal split in 1886. Between 1906 and 1909, several important measures were watered down or rejected outright: for example,
Augustine Birrell introduced the Education Bill 1906, which was intended to address
nonconformist grievances arising from the
Education Act 1902, but it was amended by the Lords to such an extent that it effectively became a different bill, whereupon the Commons dropped it. This led to a resolution in the House of Commons on 26 June 1907, put forward by Liberal Prime Minister
Henry Campbell-Bannerman, declaring that the Lords' power ought to be curtailed. In 1909, hoping to force an election, the Lords rejected the financial bill based on the government budget (the "
People's Budget") put forward by
David Lloyd George, This action, according to the Commons, was "a breach of the constitution and a usurpation of the rights of the Commons." Following the election, the Lords relented on the budget (which had been reintroduced by the government), The Lords was now faced with the prospect of a Parliament Act, which had considerable support from the Irish Nationalists. The government threatened another dissolution if the Parliament Act were not passed, and followed through on their threat when opposition in the Lords did not diminish. The
December 1910 general election produced little change from January. King
George V was asked if he would be prepared to create sufficient peers, which he would only do if the matter arose. The King did, however, demand that the bill would have to be rejected at least once by the Lords before his intervention. Two amendments made by the Lords were rejected by the Commons, and opposition to the bill showed little sign of abating. This led Asquith to declare the King's intention to overcome the majority in the House of Lords by creating sufficient new peers. The bill was finally passed in the Lords by 131 votes to 114 votes, a majority of 17. This reflected a large number of abstentions.
Government of Ireland Act 1914 The Parliament Act meant that the Unionists in the House of Lords could no longer block Home Rule, but could only delay Royal Assent by two years. Asquith decided to postpone any concessions to the Unionists until the bill's third passage through the Commons, when he believed the Unionists would be desperate for a compromise. Historian
Roy Jenkins concluded that had Asquith tried for an earlier agreement, he would have had no luck, as many of his opponents wanted a fight and the opportunity to smash his government.
Edward Carson, leader of the Irish Unionists in Parliament, threatened a revolt if Home Rule was enacted. The new Conservative leader,
Bonar Law, campaigned in Parliament and in northern Ireland, warning Ulstermen against "Rome Rule", that is, domination by the island's Catholic majority. Many who opposed Home Rule felt that the Liberals had violated
the Constitution by pushing through major constitutional change without a clear electoral mandate, with the House of Lords, formerly the "watchdog of the constitution", not reformed as had been promised in the preamble of the 1911 Act and thus justified actions that in other circumstances might be treason. Bonar Law was pushing hard certainly blustering and threatening, and perhaps bluffing but in the end his strategy proved both coherent and effective. The passions generated by the Irish question contrasted with Asquith's cool detachment, and he deemed the prospective partition of the county of
Tyrone, which had a mixed population, "an impasse, with unspeakable consequences, upon a matter which to English eyes seems inconceivably small, & to Irish eyes immeasurably big". As the Commons debated the Home Rule bill in late 1912 and early 1913, unionists in the north of Ireland mobilised, with talk of Carson declaring a Provisional Government and
Ulster Volunteer Forces (UVF) built around the
Orange Lodges, but in the cabinet, only Churchill viewed this with alarm. These forces, insisting on their loyalty to the British Crown but increasingly well-armed with smuggled German weapons, prepared to do battle with the
British Army, but Unionist leaders were confident that the army would not aid any attempt to force Home Rule on Ulster. As the Home Rule bill awaited its third passage through the Commons, the
Curragh incident occurred in April 1914. Some sixty army officers, led by Brigadier-General
Hubert Gough, announced that they would rather be dismissed from the service than obey. With unrest spreading to army officers in England, the Cabinet acted to placate the officers with a statement written by Asquith reiterating the duty of officers to obey lawful orders but claiming that the incident had been a misunderstanding. War minister
John Seely then added an unauthorised assurance, countersigned by
General John French (the head of the army), that the government had no intention of using force against Ulster. Asquith repudiated the addition, and required Seely and French to resign. Asquith took control of the War Office himself, retaining the additional responsibility until the
Great War began in 1914. On 12 May, Asquith announced that he would secure Home Rule's third passage through the Commons (accomplished on 25 May), but that there would be an amending bill with it, making special provision for Ulster. However the Lords made changes to the amending bill unacceptable to Asquith, and with no way to invoke the Parliament Act on the amending bill, Asquith agreed to meet other leaders at an all-party conference on 21 July at Buckingham Palace, chaired by the King. When no solution could be found, Asquith and his cabinet planned further concessions to the Unionists, but this was suspended when the crisis on the Continent erupted into war. In September 1914, the Home Rule bill went on the statute book (as the
Government of Ireland Act 1914) but was immediately suspended. It never went into effect.
World War, Partition of Ireland and Irish Independence On the outbreak of the First World War in August 1914, Asquith agreed with Redmond, the leader of the INP, that the Home Rule Bill would be signed into law, accompanied by an Act suspending it for the duration of the war. This was done. This solution was supported at the time by a majority of the Irish population.
Ireland was equally at war with Germany and most Unionist and Nationalist volunteer forces freely enlisted in the new
British Service Army (the
Military Service Act 1916 ("Conscription Act") did not apply to Ireland). Nevertheless, Republican journals openly advocated violence, denounced recruiting, and vigorously promoted the views of the
Irish Republican Brotherhood (IRB). When one paper was suppressed, another took its place. Gunrunning was organised, paid for by multimillion-dollar fundraising in the United States. The IRB asked the Kaiser to include freedom of Ireland as a German war aim. Germany promised to send 20,000 rifles and machine guns, ammunition, and explosives in the custody of Sir
Roger Casement. London knew trouble was brewing but decided to be extremely cautious, fearing that a full-scale clampdown on the IRB would have highly negative repercussions in the United States, which remained neutral in the war until April 1917. Instead, London decided to rely on the loyalty of Redmond and the well-established Irish Parliamentary party.
Easter Rising was the first woman elected to the British
House of Commons in 1918, but as an
Irish nationalist she did not take her seat, instead joining the
First Dáil. In 1919 she was appointed
Minister for Labour, the first female minister in a democratic
government cabinet. A
unilaterally declared "
Irish Republic" was proclaimed in Dublin at Easter 1916 the
Easter Rising. British attention was focused on the Western Front, where the Allied armies were not doing well. The uprising was very poorly organised and led, and was crushed after six days of fighting. The death total was 134 government soldiers, and 285 rebels; when the rebels surrendered, Dubliners booed them and the newspapers called their venture a foolish, futile, cruel, and mad act. Most of its leaders were
court-martialled and executed. Historians Clayton Roberts and David Roberts argue: Very large numbers of Nationalists across Ireland now deserted the IPP and gave their support to
Sinn Féin, the Republican party demanding outright independence. In 1917, coalition Prime Minister
David Lloyd George tried to introduce Home Rule at the close of the 1917–18
Irish Convention. He failed because he also was desperate for soldiers and imposed conscription on Ireland, causing the
conscription crisis. As a result, in the
1918 general election, Sinn Féin won a large majority of Irish seats but its MPs refused to take their seats at Westminster. Instead they set up the
First Dáil (parliament) in Dublin, announced an independent
Irish Republic and declared war against the British government, which was still in control in Ireland. The coalition government in London had three choices: implement the 1914 Home Rule Act with an amending bill to exclude Ulster; repeal it; or replace it with new legislation: it took the third route. The
Government of Ireland Act 1920 partitioned Ireland, North and South. The policy had broad support in
Northern Ireland, as well as England Wales and Scotland, with support from Conservatives and Liberals, although the small new Labour Party opposed partition.
Irish War of Independence The Irish War of Independence was fought between the
Irish Republican Army (IRA) and those of the United Kingdom, between January 1919 and July 1921. The IRA, led by
Michael Collins, consisted of roughly 3,000 rebels and used
asymmetric warfare against British forces, which included the
Black and Tans and the
Auxiliary Division. In 1920, in the height of the war, Prime Minister
David Lloyd George introduced the
Government of Ireland Act 1920 which partitioned Ireland into
Southern Ireland and
Northern Ireland from May 1921. In December 1921, the Irish Republic and the United Kingdom agreed an
Anglo-Irish Treaty to end the war. It created a largely autonomous
dominion, the
Irish Free State, to replace the (failed) Southern Ireland. Meanwhile, Northern Ireland two thirds of the ancient province of
Ulster (with home rule) remained part of the United Kingdom. The Dáil majority ratified the treaty, but De Valera, President of the Dáil, rejected it. De Valera led a
civil war in Ireland but was defeated. The treaty with Britain went into effect and Northern Ireland remained with the UK.
1921–1922: establishment of Northern Ireland and the Irish Free State Resolution of the Irish issue became feasible when the Conservative Party changed from its inflexible commitment to union of Great Britain with all of Ireland. The new factors included Lloyd George's bargaining skills; new, more and flexible Conservative leaders; relaxation of die-hard determination after the guarantee of permanent union of most of Ulster in the UK; and general disapproval of the policy of coercion. The Treaty of 1921 was inconsistent with Labour Party Irish policy. Nevertheless, the two Labour MPs supported it in debate as did the Labour press. Labour wanted an end to the Irish imbroglio so Britain could return to class-based issues. With the Free State at arm's length and Northern Ireland securely part of the UK, the Irish issue faded away and became much less central to British politics. ==1923 to 2015==