 | Representative peer: Encyclopedia II - Representative peer - Ireland
Representative peer - Ireland
Under the Act of Union of 1800, Irish peers elected twenty-eight representative peers, who served for life. The Chamber of the Irish House of Lords housed the first election, with the peers or their proxies attending. The Clerk of the Crown in Ireland was responsible for electoral arrangements; each peer voted by an open and public ballot. The results of the first election were announced by the Clerk of the Crown. After the Union, new elections were held whenever vacancies occurred due to the death of any peer. The Lord Chancellor of Great Britain (the presiding officer of the House of Lords) would certify the vacancy, and the Lord Chancellor of Ireland would direct the Clerk of the Crown to issue ballots to Irish peers. The ballots were returned to the Clerk of the Crown in Ireland, who was responsible for determining the victor.
Ireland was also represented in the House of Lords by four Lords Spiritual, who sat in rotation for terms lasting one session each. At any one time, an Archbishop and three Bishops represented Ireland, with the seat passing according to a fixed rotation (except that those Lords Spiritual who were also elected to serve as representative peers would be omitted). The order for Archbishops was: the Archbishop of Armagh, the Archbishop of Dublin, the Archbishop of Cashel and the Archbishop of Tuam. The order for Bishops was: the Bishop of Meath, the Bishop of Kildare, the Bishop of Derry, the Bishop of Raphoe, the Bishop of Limerick, Ardsert and Adgadoe, the Bishop of Dromore, the Bishop of Ephin, the Bishop of Down and Connor, the Bishop of Waterford and Lismore, the Bishop of Leighlin and Ferns, the Bishop of Cloyne, the Bishop of Cork and Ross, the Bishop of Killaloe and Kilfenora, the Bishop of Kilmore, the Bishop of Clougher, the Bishop of Ossory, the Bishop of Killala and Achonry and finally the Bishop of Clonsert and Kilmacduagh. The rotation was changed by the Church Temporalities Act of 1833, which merged many dioceses and degraded the archbishoprics of Tuam and Cashel to bishoprics.
Following its disestablishment in 1871, the Church of Ireland ceased to send spiritual representatives. In 1922, with the formation of the Irish Free State, Irish peers ceased to elect representatives, but those already elected continued to serve for life. The last of the temporal peers, Francis Charles Adelbert Needham, 4th Earl of Kilmorey, died in 1961. Disputes then arose as to whether or not representative peers could still be elected. The Act establishing the Irish Free State was silent on the matter, though it did abolish the mechanism for such elections by abolishing the posts of Lord Chancellor of Ireland and Clerk of the Crown in Ireland. Various Irish peers petitioned the House of Lords for a restoration of their right to elect representatives. In 1962, the Joint Committee on House of Lords Reform rejected such plans. In the next year, when the Peerage Act, which among other things gave all Scottish peers the right to sit in the House of Lords, was being considered, an amendment to similarly allow Irish peers to attend was defeated, ninety to eight. Two years later, in 1965, Randall John Somerled McDonnell, 8th Earl of Antrim and other Irish peers petitioned the House of Lords, arguing that the right to elect representative peers had never been formally abolished.
The House of ruled against the Irish peers. The Lord Reid, a Lord of Appeal in Ordinary, based his ruling on the Act of Union, which stated that representative peers sat "on the part of Ireland." He reasoned that, since the island had been divided into the Irish Free State and Northern Ireland, there was no such political entity called "Ireland" which the representative peers could be said to represent. Lord Reid wrote, "A statutory provision is impliedly repealed if a later enactment brings to an end a state of things the continuance of which is essential for its operation."
The Lord Wilberforce, another Lord of Appeal in Ordinary, disagreed that a major enactment such as the Act of Union could be repealed by implication. He argued instead on the basis that the Irish Free State (Agreement) Act 1921—which was silent on the election of representative peers—abolished the posts of Lord Chancellor of Ireland and Clerk of the Crown in Ireland. The Lord Chancellor of Ireland was responsible for calling elections of representative peers, and the Clerk of the Crown in Ireland was responsible for sending peers their ballots. Since these offices had been abolished, Lord Wilberforce argued, there was no mechanism by which Irish peers could be elected. Here too, the petitioners lost.
The petitioners did not bring up the point that Northern Ireland remained a part of the United Kingdom. Lord Reid's objections would then be rebutted, as representative peers would sit on the part of Northern Ireland. Similarly, Lord Wilberforce's arguments relating to the removal of the mechanism for the election could be answered, as the Lord Chancellor of Ireland and the Clerk of the Crown in Ireland did have replacements in Northern Ireland. Burke's Peerage & Baronetage suggests that the reason for which the arguments relating to Northern Ireland "was that leading counsel for the petitioning Irish peers was convinced that the members of the Committee for Privileges were with him on what he considered was his best argument and did not want to alienate them by introducing another point."
In order to prevent further appeals on the matter, Parliament passed, as a part of the annual Statute Law Repeals Bill (1971), a clause revoking the sections of the Act of Union relating to the election of Irish representative peers.
Other related archives1707, 1711, 1782, 1800, 1801, 1833, 1869, 1871, 1922, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1965, 1971, 2000, Act of Union, Archbishop of Armagh, Archbishop of Dublin, Archbishop of Tuam, Charles II, Church of Ireland, House of Commons, House of Lords, House of Lords Act 1999, Irish Free State, Irish Free State (Agreement) Act 1921, Irish House of Lords, James Douglas, 4th Duke of Hamilton, List of Irish representative peers, List of Scottish representative peers, Lord Chancellor of Great Britain, Lord Chancellor of Ireland, Lord Clerk Register, Lord of Appeal in Ordinary, Lords Spiritual, Northern Ireland, Palace of Holyroodhouse, Peerage Act 1963, Peerage of England, Peerage of Great Britain, Peerage of Ireland, Peerage of Scotland, Peerage of the United Kingdom, United Kingdom, block voting, disestablishment, hereditary peers, privileges, writs of summons
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Ireland", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |