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Fine Gael

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Template:Infobox Irish Political Party Fine Gael – The United Ireland Party, shortened to Fine Gael (IPA: [ˌfʲɪnʲə ˈgeːɫ])[1] is the second largest political party in the Republic of Ireland. It claims a membership of 30,000,[2] and is the largest opposition party in Dáil Éireann.

Fine Gael was founded in 1933 following the merger of its parent party Cumann na nGaedhael, the Centre Party and the quasi-fascist Army Comrades Association, popularly known as the "Blueshirts".[3] Its origins lie in the struggle for Irish independence and the pro-Treaty side in the Irish Civil War, identifying in particular Michael Collins as the founder of the movement.[4]

Modern Fine Gael describes itself as a party of the progressive centre, with core values focussed on fiscal rectitude, individual rights and responsibilities and free enterprise. They are strongly pro-EU integration and opposed to violent Irish republicanism.[5] Fine Gael is Ireland's only party in the European People's Party (EPP); its MEPs sit in the EPP-ED group. The party's youth wing, Young Fine Gael, was formed in 1977 and has approximately four thousand members.[6]

The current party leader is Enda Kenny. He was elected by a secret ballot of the parliamentary party on 5 June 2002.[7]


History

File:Dickmulc.jpg
Richard Mulcahy

Following the rise in support for Éamon de Valera's anti-Treaty Fianna Fáil party in the mid-1920s, a new strategy was felt necessary to bolster the pro-Treaty factions which found themselves in opposition. As a result of the Army Comrades Association's defence of Cumann na nGaedhael from republican intimidation Fine Gael was formed through a merger of the ACA, Cumann na nGaedhael and the Centre Party on 3 September 1933.[8] Fine Gael candidates were elected to only thirty-one seats in the 1948 general election, however Fianna Fáil's failure to achieve an overall majority led to the creation of the first Inter-Party Government, made up of an alliance of anti-Fianna Fáil parties, which served between 1948 and 1951. Fine Gael's leader at the time, Richard Mulcahy, was considered too controversial among members of Clann na Poblachta to be Taoiseach due to his role as Chief-of-Staff to the Irish Army in the execution of republicans during the Irish Civil War.[9] Instead, John A. Costello, a compromise candidate, served as head of the government. Costello also headed the second Inter-Party Government which served between 1954 and 1957. Liam Cosgrave, Minister for External Affairs in the coalition negotiated Ireland's entry into the United Nations in 1955.[10] In 1957, de Valera and Fianna Fáil were returned to power and Fine Gael returned to opposition. During its period in opposition, the party's Just Society policy statement came into being. These policies came from the emerging social democratic wing of the party.[11] In 1966, Fine Gael candidate Tom O'Higgins came within one percent of defeating incumbent Éamon de Valera in the presidential election. As events in Northern Ireland spiralled out of control in the late 1960s, new party leader Liam Cosgrave sought to focus the party's view on its role as protector of the state's institutions, and to neutralise feuding between the party leadership and the centre-left branch of the party.

Fine Gael was returned to government in a National Coalition with the Labour Party in 1973. The coalition was beset by problems from the start, including the oil crisis and escalating violence in Northern Ireland.[12] The resignation of President Cearbhall Ó Dálaigh in 1976 after a confrontation with Minister for Defence Paddy Donegan was also a blow to the credibility of the coalition. In 1977, Fianna Fáil under Jack Lynch won an unprecedented twenty-seat majority in the Dáil, and returned to government. Cosgrave resigned the leadership and was replaced by Garret FitzGerald. FitzGerald became Fine Gael's third Taoiseach, again in a short-lived coalition with Labour between 1981 and February 1982. FitzGerald revived Fine Gael's fortunes to the point where they were five seats behind Fianna Fáil following the November 1982 general election. The party returned to government with Labour. FitzGerald negotiated the Anglo-Irish Agreement with British prime minister Margaret Thatcher in 1985. However, the government struggled to control high unemployment and emigration, and was heavily defeated by Fianna Fáil under Charles Haughey in 1987.

John Bruton

FitzGerald was replaced as leader by Alan Dukes, who spearheaded the Tallaght Strategy, under which Fine Gael would not oppose economic measures put forward by the minority Fianna Fáil government in the national interest.[13] The strategy was an electoral disappointment, and the party gained four seats in the 1989 general election. Dukes resigned the leadership after Fine Gael's Austin Currie finished a distant third behind Mary Robinson and Brian Lenihan in the 1990 presidential election.[14] He was replaced by John Bruton. As Fianna Fáil had abandoned its core policy of not going into opposition following the 1989 election, Fine Gael found itself in opposition to a Fianna Fáil-Labour government following the general election in 1992. The government collapsed in 1994, allowing Bruton to become Taoiseach in a Fine Gael-Labour-Democratic Left Rainbow Coalition. The three government parties ran on a united platform in the 1997 election, and Fine Gael gained nine seats. Labour lost heavily however, and Fianna Fáil led by Bertie Ahern came to power in a coalition with the Progressive Democrats.[15] Bruton was replaced as leader in 2001 by Michael Noonan, who led the party into its worst-ever general election in 2002; the party lost twenty-three seats, including those of deputy-leader Jim Mitchell and former leader Alan Dukes.[16] Noonan resigned as leader as the results of the election were being tallied, and was replaced in a subsequent leadership election by Enda Kenny.

Policies

File:Portrait of Micheál Ó Coileáin.jpg
General Michael Collins, founding father of the pro-Treaty movement, that would become Fine Gael.

Although Ireland's political spectrum is divided along Civil War lines, rather than the traditional European left-right split, Fine Gael describes itself as a Christian democratic party, with a focus on law and order.[5] As the descendent of the pro-Treaty factions in the Irish Civil War, Fine Gael has a strong affinity with Michael Collins. He remains a symbol for the party, and his anniversary is celebrated each year on 22 August.[17] Fine Gael has, since its inception, been a party of fiscal rectitude, advocating pro-enterprise policies. The party is a member of the Centrist Democrat International and sits with the EPP-ED group in the European Parliament.

Fine Gael is among the most pro-European integration parties in the Republic of Ireland, having supported the failed European Constitution[18] and advocating participation in European common defence.[19] Under Enda Kenny the party has opposed Irish neutrality, with Kenny claiming that "the truth is, Ireland is not neutral. We are merely unaligned."[18] Under Kenny the party has also strongly opposed the perceived "rip-off" society that has developed in Ireland, advocating reform of stealth taxes and stamp duty.[20]

Alliance with the Labour Party

Following the unveiling of the Mullingar Accord, an election pact agreed after the local and European elections in 2004, Fine Gael and the Labour Party increasingly co-operated in the build-up to the 2007 general election, agreeing a vote-transfer pact and plan to go into government together provided the parties had the required number of seats.[21] The pact was overwhelming endorsed by Labour members at the party's conference in Tralee in May 2005.[22] Fine Gael director of elections Frank Flannery claimed that the agreement, coupled with the party's strong performance in pre-election opinion polls, could lead to a gain of twenty-eight seats in the election.[23] The party gained a total of twenty seats in the election on 24 May 2007, giving the "Alliance for Change" a total of seventy-one seats, putting the coalition six seats behind Fianna Fáil. On the first day of the new Dáil, on 14 June 2007, Enda Kenny was nominated for Taoiseach by Fine Gael deputy-leader Richard Bruton and then-Labour leader Pat Rabbitte. He was defeated by incumbent Bertie Ahern and a coalition of Fianna Fáil, the Green Party, the Progressive Democrats and a group of Independents by eighty-nine votes to seventy-six.[24]

Leadership and deputy-leadership

Mayo TD Enda Kenny was elected leader of Fine Gael in a secret ballot of the parliamentary party on 5 June 2002. Kenny defeated Richard Bruton, Phil Hogan and Gay Mitchell in the leadership election, which was triggered by the resignation of Michael Noonan following the 2002 general election. The current deputy-leader of the party is Dublin North Central TD and party Finance spokesperson Richard Bruton. He was preceded as deputy leader by Jim Mitchell.

List of party leaders

Leader Period Constituency
Eoin O'Duffy 1933-34 None[25]
W. T. Cosgrave 1934-44 Carlow-Kilkenny
Richard Mulcahy 1944-59[26][27] Tipperary
James Dillon 1959-65 Monaghan
Liam Cosgrave 1965-77 Dún Laoghaire
Garret FitzGerald 1977-87 Dublin South East
Alan Dukes 1987-90 Kildare South
John Bruton 1990-2001 Meath
Michael Noonan 2001-02 Limerick East
Enda Kenny 2002-present Mayo

Electoral performance

In the most recent general election, held in May 2007, Fine Gael gained twenty seats bringing them to a total of fifty-one. The party ran candidates in all forty-three constituencies, and had candidates elected in every constituency except Dublin Central, Dublin Mid West, Dublin North West and Kildare South. In local elections held on 11 June 2004, Fine Gael won 293 seats, an increase of sixteen on 1999, bringing the party within nine seats of Fianna Fáil nationally.[28] In European elections held on the same day, the party won five seats, becoming the most represented Irish party in the European Parliament. Fine Gael won fourteen seats in Seanad Éireann following elections in 2007, a loss of one from the previous election in 2002. No Fine Gael candidate has ever been elected President of Ireland. The most recent Fine Gael presidential candidate, Mary Banotti, finished second in the 1997 election.

General election results

Year Dáil Number of seats Percentage of vote
1937 9th 48 34.8%
1938 10th 45 33.3%
1943 11th 32 23.1%
1944 12th 30 21.8%
1948 13th 31 19.8%
1951 14th 40 25.7%
1943 15th 50 32.0%
1957 16th 40 26.6%
1961 17th 47 32.0%
1965 18th 47 33.9%
1969 19th 50 33.3%
1973 20th 54 35.1%
1977 21st 43 30.6%
1981 22nd 65 39.2%
1982 (Feb) 23rd 63 37.3%
1982 (Nov) 24th 70 39.2%
1987 25th 50 27.1%
1989 26th 55 29.3%
1992 27th 45 24.5%
1997 28th 54 27.9%
2002 29th 31 22.5%
2007 30th 51 27.3%

Front bench

Fine Gael's front bench sits as the official Opposition in Dáil Éireann at Leinster House.
Portfolio Spokesperson
Leader of the Opposition
Northern Ireland
Enda Kenny 2002
Deputy-Leader of the Opposition
Finance
Richard Bruton 2002
Justice & Law Reform Charles Flanagan 2007
Foreign Affairs Billy Timmins 2007
Enterprise, Trade & Employment Leo Varadkar 2007
Health & Children Dr. James Reilly 2007
the Environment, Heritage & Local Government Phil Hogan 2007
Arts, Sport & Tourism Olivia Mitchell 2007
Social, Family Affairs & Equality Olwyn Enright 2007
Transport & the Marine Fergus O'Dowd 2007
Community, Rural & Gaeltacht Affairs Michael Ring 2007
Agriculture & Food Michael Creed 2007
Education & Science Brian Hayes 2007
Defence Jimmy Deenihan 2007
Immigration and Integration Denis Naughten 2007
Children Alan Shatter 2007
Communications & Natural Resources Simon Coveney 2007
Chief Whip Paul Kehoe 2004

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ Often anglicised to [ˌfɪnə ˈgeɪl]; approximate English translation: Family or Tribe of the Irish.
  2. ^ Fine Gael. Join Fine Gael. Retrieved on 31 October 2007.
  3. ^ Gerard O'Connell History of Fine Gael. Retrieved on 31 October 2007.
  4. ^ The Irish Times. Legacy of the Easter Rising. Retrieved on 31 October 2007.
  5. ^ a b Fine Gael. Our Values. Retrieved on 31 October 2007.
  6. ^ RTÉ News. Election 2007 - Youth parties. Retrieved on 31 October 2007.
  7. ^ RTÉ News (5 June 2002). Enda Kenny elected Fine Gael leader. Retrieved on 31 October 2007.
  8. ^ Gerard O'Connell. Eoin O'Duffy. Retrieved on 31 October 2007.
  9. ^ University College Dublin Archives. Richard Mulcahy. Retrieved on 2 November 2007.
  10. ^ Dermot Ahern (18 November 2005). The Fiftieth Anniversary of Ireland’s Membership of the United Nations—Looking Forward. Royal Irish Academy. Retrieved on 31 October 2007.
  11. ^ David Begg (28 February 2004). The Just Society. Irish Congress of Trade Unions. Retrieved on 31 October 2007.
  12. ^ Peter Barberis, John McHugh, Mike Tyldsley. Encyclopedia of British and Irish Political Organizations, p.739. Published by Continuum International Publishing Group. ISBN 0826458149.
  13. ^ The Economist (22 June 2006). Charles Haughey: obituary. Retrieved on 31 October 2007.
  14. ^ Bernard A. Cook (New York, London, 2001). Europe Since 1945: An Encyclopedia. Published by Taylor & Francis. ISBN 0815340575.
  15. ^ RTÉ Libraries and Archives. 1997 general election. Retrieved on 31 October 2007.
  16. ^ RTÉ Libraries and Archives. 2002 general election. Retrieved on 31 October 2007.
  17. ^ The Hogan Stand (21 September 2005). Michael Collins' view of life in Achill Gaeltacht. Retrieved on 31 October 2007.
  18. ^ a b National Forum on Europe (26 October 2006). Enda Kenny calls for Unified EU Approach to Immigration. Retrieved on 31 October 2007.
  19. ^ National Forum on Europe (3 April 2003). Should we back a pledge to defend others if they come under attack?. Retrieved on 31 October 2007.
  20. ^ Fine Gael. 2007 General Election Manifesto. Retrieved on 31 October 2007.
  21. ^ RTÉ News (6 September 2004). Opposition leaders unveil 'Mullingar Accord'. Retrieved on 1 November 2007.
  22. ^ RTÉ News (28 May 2005). Rabbitte addresses Labour conference. Retrieved on 1 November 2007.
  23. ^ RTÉ News (14 September 2006). Fine Gael repeats seat gain claim. Retrieved on 1 November 2007.
  24. ^ RTÉ News (14 June 2007). Ahern names new Cabinet. Retrieved on 1 November 2007.
  25. ^ O'Duffy did not hold a seat in the Oireachtas while he was party leader.
  26. ^ While Mulcahy was a member of the Seanad in 1944, Tom O'Higgins acted as parliamentary party leader.
  27. ^ Between 1948 and 1959, John A. Costello served as parliamentary leader.
  28. ^ ElectionsIreland.org. Local Elections 2004. Retrieved on 31 October 2007.

Bibliography

  • Nealon's Guide to the 29th Dáil and Seanad (Gill and Macmillan, 2002) (ISBN 0-7171-3288-9)
  • Stephen Collins, "The Cosgrave Legacy" (Blackwater, 1996) (ISBN 0-86121-658-X)
  • Garret FitzGerald, "Garret FitzGerald: An Autobiography" (Gill and Macmillan, 1991) (ISBN 0-7171-1600-X)
  • Jack Jones, In Your Opinion: Political and Social Trends in Ireland through the Eyes of the Electorate (Townhouse, 2001) (ISBN 1-86059-149-3)
  • Maurice Manning, James Dillon: A Biography (Wolfhound, 1999/2000) (ISBN 0-86327-823-X)
  • Stephen O'Byrnes, Hiding Behind a Face: Fine Gael under FitzGerald (Gill and Macmillan: 1986) (ISBN 0-7171-1448-1)
  • Raymond Smith, Garret: The Enigma (Aherlow, 1985) (no ISBN)