IRELAND. Date of Elections: June 16, 1977

Similar documents
AUSTRALIA. Date of Elections: 11 July Purpose of Elections

How the Dáil is Elected

CANADA. Date of Elections: 18 February 1980

UNITED KINGDOM. Date of Elections: February 28, 1974

CANADA. Date of Elections: July 8, Purpose of Elections

How Members of Local Authorities are Elected

AUSTRALIA. Elections were held to renew all the members of the House of Representatives on the normal expiry of their terms of office.

THAILAND. Date of Elections: January 26, 1975

1. Representation in the European Parliament Constituencies Elections to the Parliament Who can become an MEP?

European Parliament. How Ireland s MEP s are elected

Number 25 of 1997 ELECTORAL ACT, 1997 ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS

FRANCE. Elections were held for all the seats in the National Assembly on the normal expiry of the members' term of office.

Guide to Ireland s PR-STV Electoral System

Third Evaluation Round. Evaluation Report on Ireland Transparency of Party Funding

The President. Article XII XIV The President. Introduction

House of Lords Reform Bill

CHAPTER 467 EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT ELECTIONS ACT

ELECTION TO THE OFFICE OF VICE-PRESIDENT OF INDIA. FAQs

SENATE NOMINEE ELECTION BILL. No. 60. An Act to provide for the Election of Saskatchewan Senate Nominees TABLE OF CONTENTS

LUXEMBOURG. Date of Elections: December 15, Characteristics of Parliament

DENMARK. Dates of elections: December 4, 1973 (December 13, 1973 in the Faeroe Islands)

Nineteenth Amendment to the Constitution

The Constitution (Twelfth Amendment) Act, 1991

CITIZENS EFFECTING CHANGE

PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS ACT 1993

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

Ireland's Constitution of 1937 with Amendments through 2012

House of Lords Reform developments in the 2010 Parliament

THE CONSTITUTION (AMENDMENT) BILL (No. XXII of 2018) Explanatory Memorandum

EUDO Citizenship Observatory

Constitution. Liberal Party of Canada

Model Parliament Unit

Factsheet on Electoral Provisions in Nepal s New Constitution

THE ELECTORAL CODE OF THE REPUBLIC OF ALBANIA

Number 38 of 2001 ELECTORAL (AMENDMENT) ACT, 2001 ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS

D Hondt system for allocation of parliamentary positions 22 March 2016

ELECTORAL REPRINTED AS ON 20 th AUGUST 2010

THE ELECTORAL CODE OF THE REPUBLIC OF ALBANIA

PARTY VOTE LEAKAGE IN WARDS WITH THREE CANDIDATES OF THE SAME PARTY IN THE SCOTTISH LOCAL GOVERNMENT ELECTIONS IN 2012

Parliamentary Voting System and Constituencies Bill

LAWS OF SOLOMON ISLANDS CHAPTER 118 PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS PART I PRELIMINARY PART II PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT

THE CONSTITUTION OF KENYA, 2010

AIR Government Test Review U.S. Constitution

PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION

CONSTITUTION OF HARROGATE AND DISTRICT NHS FOUNDATION TRUST (A PUBLIC BENEFIT CORPORATION)

Northern Ireland (Miscellaneous Provisions) Bill

CONSTITUTION OF ZIMBABWE AMENDMENT (NO. 19) BILL, 2008

Guidance for candidates

ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS Section PART I PRELIMINARY

KENYA GAZETTE SUPPLEMENT

Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011

THE CONSTITUTION OF KENYA (AMENDMENT) BILL, A Bill for. AN ACT of Parliament to amend the Constitution of Kenya

So when is the next election? : Australian elections timetable as at 1 September 2016

Electoral Amendment Bill

Number 8 of 2005 DORMANT ACCOUNTS (AMENDMENT) ACT 2005 ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS. 3. Amendment of section 2 (interpretation) of Principal Act.

This text of the Constitution is a copy of the text enrolled on 27 May, 1999 pursuant to Article except that :

Number 31 of 2001 STANDARDS IN PUBLIC OFFICE ACT 2001 REVISED. Updated to 13 April 2017

Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act amendments relating to European Parliamentary Elections; and for connected purposes.

2018 MUNICIPAL ELECTION INFORMATION FOR CANDIDATES

Guidance for candidates and agents

AN ASSESSMENT OF THE DEMOGRAPHICS OF IRELAND AND HOW THEY EFFECT VOTING PATTERNS

BY-LAWS OF THE BRUCE TRAIL CONSERVANCY

Recall of MPs Bill (Draft) CONTENTS PART I. How an MP becomes the subject of a recall referendum PART II. Returning officers and their role PART III

Guidance for candidates and agents

Information from the. Essential Features of the System of Local Government Elections in Lower Saxony

CONSTITUTION (AND ARTICLES of ASSOCIATION) LIBERTARIAN PARTY of IOWA A Non-Profit Association

LABOUR PARTY CONSTITUTION

GOVERNMENT GAZETTE REPUBLIC OF NAMIBIA

The Rule Book Section J Rules for the Nomination of Parliamentary Candidates

HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

SOCIETIES ACT BYLAWS OF THE B.C. HOSPICE/PALLIATIVE CARE ASSOCIATION TABLE OF CONTENTS

US Government Module 3 Study Guide

REFERENDUM ACT, As amended on December 22, 2001

MANITOBA SOCCER ASSOCIATION

Guidance for candidates and agents

ACT. This Act may be cited as the Constitution of Zimbabwe Amendment (No. 17) Act, 2005.

Number 23 of 2001 VOCATIONAL EDUCATION (AMENDMENT) ACT, 2001 ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS PART 1. Preliminary and General

Constitution of the Republic of Iceland *

CONSTITUTION OF THE MÉTIS NATION - SASKATCHEWAN

90 CAP. 4] Belize Constitution

Bylaws of the Illinois Republican Party

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

West London Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust Constitution

Constitution of the Reading Liberal Democrats

COMPANY LIMITED BY GUARANTEE AND NOT HAVING A SHARE CAPITAL ARTICLES OF ASSOCIATION THE OFFICE OF THE INDEPENDENT ADJUDICATOR FOR HIGHER EDUCATION

CONSTITUTION OF THE REPUBLIC OF ICELAND 1 (No. 33, 17 June 1944, as amended 30 May 1984, 31 May 1991, 28 June 1995 and 24 June 1999)

SOCIETIES ACT BYLAWS OF THE KWANTLEN POLYTECHNIC UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION TABLE OF CONTENTS

ALL ABOUT LOK SABHA AND RAJYA SABHA

President National Assembly Republic of Slovenia France Cukjati, MD. LAW ON ELECTIONS TO THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY official consolidated text (ZVDZ-UPB1)

ELECTORAL REGISTRATION AND ADMINISTRATION BILL

ELECTIONS ACT NO. 24 OF 2011 LAWS OF KENYA

BYLAWS OF THE VANCOUVER BOTANICAL GARDENS ASSOCIATION TABLE OF CONTENTS

Stockbridge Parish Council. Guidance in respect of Elections, Casual Vacancies and Co-option processes

Charter of the. As amended by the Washington State Democratic Convention on June 16, Preamble

Compare the vote Level 3

CHAPTER V PARLIAMENT PART I THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY

Paid Party staff should act impartially

The source of authority in a referendum democracy

ELECTORAL (AMENDMENT) ACT 2010

Chapter VIII : The Executive THE EXECUTIVE

Transcription:

RELAND Date of Elections: June 16, 1977 Purpose of Elections Elections were held for all the members of the House of Representatives, which was prematurely dissolved on May 25, 1977. Normal expiry of the House's term was not due until February 1978. (General elections for the Senate, which must take place no later than 90 days after a dissolution of the House of Representatives, were scheduled to be held in August, 1977.) Characteristics of Parliament The bicameral Parliament of reland, the Oireachtas, is composed of the House of Representatives (Dail Eireann) and the Senate (Seanad Eireanri). The House of Representatives has 148 members* elected for a maximum of 5 years. The Senate is composed of 60 members, of whom: (a) 11 are nominated by the Taoiseach (Prime Minister); (b) 3 are elected by the National University of reland; (c) 3 are elected by the University of Dublin; (d) 43 are elected from five panels of candidates, consisting of persons having knowledge and practical experience in, respectively, culture and education, agriculture, labour, industry and commerce, public administration and social services. Not more than 11 and not less than 5 members of the Senate are elected from any one panel. Electoral System Every citizen who is not disqualified by law and who has reached the age of 18 has the right to vote in elections to the Dail in the constituency in which he ordinarily resides. Registers of electors are revised annually at the county or county borough level. Voting is not compulsory. Members of the armed and police forces are authorized to vote by post. * See Chronicle of Parliamentary Elections V (1973-1974), p. 13. S7

n reland As regards elections for the Senate, the following persons may vote: (a) For the 3 representatives of the National University of reland, every citizen over 18 years of age who has received a degree from the University; (b) For the 3 representatives of the University of Dublin, every citizen over 18 years of age who has received either a degree or a foundation scholarship from the University or, if a woman, has obtained a non-foundation scholarship; (c) For the 43 other Senators, members of the new Ddil, the outgoing Senate and every council of a county or county borough. Electoral rolls for Senate elections are revised before each election. Citizens who fulfil the conditions required to be electors to the Ddil are entitled to stand for election to this House, with the exception of the insane, undischarged bankrupts, persons undergoing imprisonment with hard labour for at least six months or penal servitude for any term imposed by a court of competent jurisdiction, and persons convicted of corrupt electoral practices. Members of the armed and police forces, civil servants (unless excepted), the President of the Republic, the Comptroller and Auditor General and all judges are excluded from membership while holding these posts. For election to the Ddil, a person may nominate himself or may, with his consent, be nominated by another person (who is registered as a Ddil elector in the same constituency), as proposer. Nominations must be made within nine days after the issue of the writ for election, and be accompanied by a deposit of 100, which is reimbursable if the candidate is elected or gains at least one-third of the electoral quota. Candidates to the Senate must be eligible to become members of the Ddil and, in addition: (a) Be nominated by 10 registered electors of the University concerned, if they are standing for a University seat; (b) Be nominated by either 4 members of Parliament or a registered nominating body, if they are standing as panel members. Members of the Ddil are elected in a ratio of 3, 4 or 5 to each of the 42 electoral constituencies, by proportional representation under the single transferable vote system. According to this system, each voter receives a ballot-paper containing the names of all the candidates in his constituency. He votes for one of these by writing the figure 1 opposite the name of his choice; he is then at liberty to indicate an order of preference for the other candidates by adding the figures 2, 3, 4, etc. against their names. At the opening of the count, the ballot papers are sorted according to the 88

reland in first preferences recorded. The total number of valid papers is then computed, and from that figure the electoral quota is calculated through division by the number of seats to be filled, plus one. Candidates who obtain a number of first preferences equal to, or greater than, this quota in the first count are immediately declared elected. f, however, no candidate has reached the quota, the candidate who received the lowest number of votes is eliminated and his votes are transferred to the candidate for whom a second preference is recorded. f a candidate receives more than the quota required for election, his remaining votes are transferred to the remaining candidates in accordance with the subsequent preferences expressed by the electors. When the number of remaining candidates neither elected nor eliminated equals the number of vacancies to be filled, those candidates are declared elected, although they may not have reached the quota. Voting for the Senate, which is by secret postal ballot, is also conducted according to the single transferable vote system. The Speaker is automatically deemed to have been re-elected to the Ddil without having to go through the electoral process. Vacancies which occur between general elections are filled through byelections, except that the Prime Minister nominates a person to fill a vacant seat formerly held by a nominated Senator. General Political Considerations and Conduct of the Elections Parliament was prematurely dissolved by the President of the Republic, on the advice of Prime Minister Liam Cosgrave. The three-week election campaign was fought on personality as well as on those issues which had proved of great concern to the ruling Fine Gael (United reland Party) Labour coalition Government: the economy (high rates of unemployment and inflation) and the question of how to deal with the rish Republican Army (RA) involved in the continuing hostilities in Northern reland. Mr. Cosgrave blamed the economic woes on the increasing prices of oil imports and the general world economic slowdown, and was known as a partisan of tough policies vis-a-vis the outlawed RA's militants, who sought the reunification of Northern reland with the Republic. Opposition (Fianna Fail, or Republican Party) leader Jack Lynch countered by stressing that the economic problems could have been minimized and favoured reunification. On polling day, the country's electorate bolstered by some 400,000 18-year-olds voting for the first time in Dail elections returned the Fianna Fail to power with a record number of seats. Mr. Lynch, who had been Prime Minister from 1966 to 1973, once again took up this post and had his new Cabinet approved on July 6. 89

V reland { P O O "a *' t 3 j 05 'Tp 05 ^ * g OS l> r~ * N _ ^ t-_ q oo~ co" of of i co co <N" P-T P-T ** a? ts "+J!3^ i CO 05 CO O N 05 t-«s # CN 05 05 05 O 05 CO CO * CO l> O O <! OOlO lo 05 -H i w?3 12 * s r > Si < CO -«* )< Q <N CD t~ -# CN W 05 «5 *-< oo co r- 00 00 N -f. 00 -# --< <N co CO CO CM -H (N CC rt lij r- UT) <-c c t >pq> a 0 i f*i (*< H- SQ a DO

reland v 2. Distribviion of Members of the Dail according to Sex Men 142 Women 6 Tl8 91