Executive of the 1974 Northern Ireland Assembly explained

Cabinet Name:Executive of the
1974 Northern Ireland Assembly
Cabinet Number:1974
Cabinet Type:Executive
Jurisdiction:Northern Ireland
Date Formed:1 January 1974
Date Dissolved:28 May 1974
State Head:Elizabeth II
Current Number:9
Legislature Status:Coalition
Election:1973 assembly election
Legislature Term:1973 Assembly
Successor:Direct rule
1st Executive of Northern Ireland

A power-sharing Northern Ireland Executive was formed following the Northern Ireland Assembly elections of 1973. The executive served as the devolved government of Northern Ireland from 1 January 1974 until its collapse on 28 May 1974.

History

Elections to a Northern Ireland Assembly were held on 28 June 1973.[1] On 21 November, the Sunningdale Agreement was reached on a voluntary coalition of pro-agreement parties, and the Executive took office on 1 January 1974.[2] Prominent members of the executive included former Ulster Unionist Party Prime Minister Brian Faulkner as Chief Executive, then Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) leader Gerry Fitt as Deputy Chief Executive, future Nobel Laureate and SDLP leader John Hume as Minister for Commerce and then leader of the Alliance Party of Northern Ireland Oliver Napier as Legal Minister and head of the Office of Law Reform.[3]

The UUP was deeply divided; its Standing Committee voted to participate in the executive by a margin of only 132 to 105.[4] Since the partition of Ireland, unionists had been opposed to sharing power with the Irish nationalist minority and the end of majoritarianism caused great strife in the UUP. Other contentious issues were internment, policing and the question of the planned Council of Ireland.

After opposition from within the UUP and the Ulster Workers' Council strike, the executive and Assembly collapsed on 28 May 1974 when Faulkner resigned as Chief Executive.[5]

Chief Executive

In January 1974 Brian Faulkner became Chief Executive in the power-sharing executive with the SDLP and the non-sectarian Alliance Party, a political alliance cemented at the Sunningdale Conference that year. After opposition from within the UUP and the Ulster Workers Council Strike, the executive and assembly collapsed on 28 May 1974 when Faulkner resigned as Chief Executive. Brian Faulkner would later then form his own political party known as the Unionist Party of Northern Ireland.[6] They contested the 1975 Constitutional Convention Elections in which they got only 5 seats and no new Chief Executive was elected to replace Brian Faulkner.

No.width=170Name

PortraitTerm of officewidth=80Elected
ExecutivePartyLast office(s) held before election
1.Brian Faulkner

1 January 197428 May 19741973 (Assembly)1974
Executive
Ulster Unionist PartyPrime Minister of Northern Ireland
(1971–1972)
Minister of Home Affairs (1971–1972)

1974 Executive of Northern Ireland

OfficeNameTermParty
Chief ExecutiveBrian Faulkner1974UUP
Deputy Chief ExecutiveGerry Fitt1974SDLP
Minister of AgricultureLeslie Morrell1974UUP
Minister of CommerceJohn Hume1974SDLP
Minister of EducationBasil McIvor1974UUP
Minister of the EnvironmentRoy Bradford1974UUP
Minister of FinanceHerbert Kirk1974UUP
Minister of Health and Social ServicesPaddy Devlin1974SDLP
Minister of Housing, Local Government and PlanningAustin Currie1974SDLP
Minister of InformationJohn Baxter1974UUP
Legal Minister and Head of the Office of Law ReformOliver Napier1974Alliance

References

  1. Web site: 2022-03-30 . CBP-8638.pdf . 2024-02-02 . researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk . 20 . PDF.
  2. Web site: CAIN: Events: The Sunningdale Agreement - Chronology of Main Events . 2024-02-02 . cain.ulster.ac.uk.
  3. Book: Politics and society in Northern Ireland, 1949-1993 . 2009 . Folens . 978-1-84741-186-0 . Holohan . Francis T. . Ireland : Leaving certificate history . Hibernian Industrial Estate, Greenhills Road, Tallaght, Dublin 24 . 37.
  4. News: Kane . Alex . 2013-07-31 . Power-sharing: Just a little bit of history repeating . 2024-02-02 . BelfastTelegraph.co.uk . en-GB . 0307-1235.
  5. Web site: 1999-05-28 . BBC News UK Politics Quarter century after first assembly's fall . 2024-02-02 . news.bbc.co.uk.
  6. Web site: CAIN: Abstracts of Organisations - 'U' . 2024-02-02 . cain.ulster.ac.uk . The Unionist Party of Northern Ireland (UPNI) was officially launched in September 1974. It was formed by a group of people who had been members of the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) and who supported Brian Faulkner after the proposals contained in the Sunningdale Agreement had been rejected by most of the members of the UUP. This group of people had contested the 1974 Westminster election under the title 'Unionist Pro-Assembly'..

See also