June 1927 Irish general election

The June 1927 Irish general election was to elect the 5th Dáil held on Thursday, 9 June following the dissolution of the 4th Dáil on 23 May 1927. It was the first election contested by Fianna Fáil, which had been formed a year earlier by Éamon de Valera, former leader of the abstentionist Anti-Treaty Sinn Féin. De Valera resigned from Sinn Féin after he failed to convince the party to take their seats if and when the Oath of Allegiance were abolished. Most of Sinn Féin's TDs, as well as the bulk of its support, followed De Valera to Fianna Fáil. The impact of this shift saw Sinn Féin all but decimated; it was reduced to five seats.

June 1927 Irish general election

← 1923
9 June 1927
← outgoing members
elected members →

153 seats in Dáil Éireann
77 seats needed for a majority
Turnout68.1% 6.8 pp
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader W. T. Cosgrave Éamon de Valera Thomas Johnson
Party Cumann na nGaedheal Fianna Fáil Labour
Leader since April 1923 26 March 1926 1914
Leader's seat Carlow–Kilkenny Clare Dublin County
Last election 63 seats, 39.0% N/A 14 seats, 10.6%
Seats won 47 44 22
Seat change 16 44 8
Popular vote 314,703 299,486 143,849
Percentage 27.4% 26.2% 12.6%
Swing 11.6 pp New party 2.0 pp

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
Leader Michael Heffernan William Redmond John J. O'Kelly
Party Farmers' Party National League Sinn Féin
Leader since 1927 1926 1926
Leader's seat Tipperary Waterford N/A
Last election 15 seats, 12.1% N/A 44 seats, 27.4%
Seats won 11 8 5
Seat change 4 8 39
Popular vote 101,955 83,598 41,401
Percentage 8.9% 7.3% 3.6%
Swing 3.2 pp New party 23.8 pp


President of the Executive Council before election

W. T. Cosgrave
Cumann na nGaedheal

President of the Executive Council after election

W. T. Cosgrave
Cumann na nGaedheal

This election is considered a classic realigning election. It all but ended Sinn Féin as a major force in the southern part of the island in its original form; it would not win more than 10 seats at an election until 2011, by which time it had undergone fundamental transformation. It also cemented Fianna Fáil as a major party in one stroke. Either Fianna Fáil or Cumann na nGaedheal/Fine Gael have led every government since, and they would remain the two largest parties in Ireland until 2020 when Sinn Féin came first in first preference votes (tied with Fianna Fáil in seats).

The 5th Dáil assembled at Leinster House on 23 June to nominate the President of the Executive Council and Executive Council of the Irish Free State for appointment by the Governor-General. W. T. Cosgrave was re-appointed leading a government of Cumann na nGaedheal.

Fianna Fáil took the oath of allegiance and its seats in the Dáil on 12 August 1927. Fianna Fáil's decision to take up its seats ended Cumann na nGaedheal's working majority, forcing Cosgrave into a minority government which proved unstable. After government victories in two by-elections, Cosgrave sought a dissolution on 25 August and a second election of that year was held in September 1927.

Result

Election to the 5th Dáil – 9 June 1927
Party Leader Seats ± % of
seats
First pref.
votes
% FPv ±%
Cumann na nGaedheal W. T. Cosgrave 47 –16 30.7 314,703 27.4 –11.6
Fianna Fáil Éamon de Valera 44 New 28.7 299,486 26.2 New
Labour Thomas Johnson 22 +8 14.4 143,849 12.6 +2.0
Farmers' Party Michael Heffernan 11 –4 7.2 101,955 8.9 –3.2
National League William Redmond 8 New 5.2 83,598 7.3 New
Sinn Féin John J. O'Kelly 5 –39 3.3 41,401 3.6 –23.8
Clann Éireann William Magennis 0 New 0 5,527 0.5 New
Blind Men's Party 0 New 0 1,559 0.1 New
Town Tenants' Association 0 0 0 1,012 0.1 –0.1
Independent N/A 16 +3 10.4 153,370 13.4 +5.3
Spoilt votes 31,337
Total 153 0 100 1,177,797 100
Electorate/Turnout 1,730,177 68.1

Voting summary

First preference vote
Cumann na nGaedheal
27.44%
Fianna Fáil
26.12%
Labour
12.55%
Farmers'
8.89%
National League Party
7.29%
Sinn Féin
3.61%
Others
0.71%
Independent
13.37%

Seats summary

Dáil seats
Cumann na nGaedheal
30.72%
Fianna Fáil
28.76%
Labour
14.38%
Farmers'
7.19%
National League Party
5.23%
Sinn Féin
3.27%
Independent
10.46%

Government formation

When the 5th Dáil first met on 23 June 1927, there were 50 TDs still abstaining. Cumann na nGaedheal formed the 3rd Executive Council of the Irish Free State with the support of the Farmers' Party and 13 Independents. This government proved unstable once Fianna Fáil took their seats.

Changes in membership

First time TDs

  • Tadhg Crowley
  • Patrick Boland
  • Andrew Fogarty
  • John Jinks
  • Michael Keyes
  • Michael Óg McFadden
  • Thomas Mullins
  • Patrick O'Dowd
  • Matthew O'Reilly
  • Timothy Quill
  • Jasper Wolfe

Outgoing TDs

  • Cornelius Connolly (Retired)
  • Patrick McFadden (Lost seat)

wikipedia, wiki, encyclopedia, book, library, article, read, free download, Information about June 1927 Irish general election, What is June 1927 Irish general election? What does June 1927 Irish general election mean?