- Source: 1994 European Parliament election in Ireland
The 1994 European Parliament election in Ireland was the Irish component of the 1994 European Parliament election. The election was conducted under the single transferable vote. Local elections were held on the same day for borough councils, urban district councils and town commissioners.
Campaign
In 1992, a general election in Ireland led to the Labour Party's best results to date, paving the way for Dick Spring to lead his party into coalition with Fianna Fáil. The 1994 local and European elections were seen in some quarters as a mid-term report on that coalition's performance. The strong result by the Green Party in particular was interpreted as a warning that left-leaning middle class voters were moving away from Labour.
The election was notable for how some parties ran "parachute candidates" (like Orla Guerin for Labour) who did not resonate with voters as well as incumbent, grassroots campaigners.
The popularity of President Mary Robinson led to parties presenting more female candidates than usual, four of whom became MEPs on this occasion.
Results
= MEPs elected
== Voting details
=See also
List of members of the European Parliament for Ireland, 1994–99 – List ordered by constituency
References
External links
ElectionsIreland.org – 1994 European Parliament (Ireland) election results
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Britania Raya
- Populisme sayap kanan
- Sinn Féin
- Brexit
- Inggris
- Skotlandia
- Partai Buruh (Britania Raya)
- Herbert Henry Asquith
- Kritik terhadap Israel
- 1994 European Parliament election in Ireland
- 2024 European Parliament election in Ireland
- List of members of the European Parliament for Ireland, 1994–1999
- 2004 European Parliament election in Ireland
- List of members of the European Parliament for Ireland, 1989–1994
- 1994 European Parliament election
- 1999 European Parliament election in Ireland
- 1994 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom
- 2014 European Parliament election in Ireland
- 1989 European Parliament election in Ireland