The last appointments to the Privy Council of Northern Ireland were made in 1971. In consequence of
the Troubles, the
Heath UK government introduced direct rule under the
Northern Ireland (Temporary Provisions) Act 1972, by suspending Northern Ireland's devolved administration and transferring its powers to the
Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, a new position in the UK Cabinet. The
Northern Ireland Constitution Act 1973 formally abolished most of the suspended institutions, including the governorship. The Privy Council of Northern Ireland was not abolished, but new appointments were prohibited, Existing members retained "their existing rank and style and obligations". Lists of living members continued to be included in ''
Whitaker's Almanack until 2018 and Dod's Parliamentary Companion'' until 2001. In 1994, the minutes of about 300 council meetings were deposited with the
Public Record Office of Northern Ireland.
Proposed revival The 1976 majority report of the
Northern Ireland Constitutional Convention recommended "That there should be a Privy Council of Northern Ireland in which some places should be offered to leading members of major opposition parties." As the report was an essentially
unionist document, the
Callaghan UK government did not accept its recommendations. John Andrew Oliver suggested in 1978 that any revival should be a "Governor’s Council" with "a wider membership and a door much more open to publicity", including more Catholic/nationalists. ==Members==