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The Irish Council Bill (or Irish Councils Bill; long title A Bill to provide for the Establishment and functions of an Administrative Council in Ireland and for other purposes connected therewith) was a bill introduced and withdrawn from the UK Parliament in 1907 by the Campbell-Bannerman administration. It proposed the devolution of power, without Home Rule, to Ireland within the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. A partly elected Irish Council would take control of many of the departments thitherto administered by the Dublin Castle administration, and have limited tax-raising powers. The bill was introduced by Augustine Birrell, the newly appointed Chief Secretary for Ireland, on 7 May 1907. It was rejected by the United Irish League (UIL) at a conference in Dublin on 21 May, which meant the Irish Parliamentary Party (IPP) aligned to the UIL would oppose it in Parliament. Henry Campbell-Bannerman announced on 3 June that the government was dropping the bill, and it was formally withdrawn on 29 July.
Political background
In 1893, the Second Home Rule Bill was rejected by the House of Lords. Whereas Irish nationalists like the IPP and UIL wanted full Home Rule with a legislature, this was opposed by Irish unionists, who also opposed any devolution scheme that might evolve into Home Rule. The Irish Reform Association and Sir Antony MacDonnell, the Under-Secretary for Ireland, unsuccessfully proposed a devolution scheme in 1904–1905. In a speech in Stirling in November 1905, Henry Campbell-Bannerman, about to take office as Liberal prime minister, promised "an instalment of representative control" for Ireland while implying no Home Rule. In 1906 James Bryce as Chief Secretary for Ireland began work with MacDonnell on a bill along the lines of the Stirling speech. When IPP leaders John Dillon and John Redmond were apprised of it, they were "as much alienated by the secrecy surrounding Bryce's scheme as shocked by the inadequacy of its proposals". Birrell replaced Bryce as Chief Secretary in 1907, and improved relations with IPP leaders. Edward Blake was involved in negotiating revisions to the draft bill with Dillon and Redmond. Originally, MacDonnell proposed that two-thirds of the Irish Council would be indirectly elected by the county councils; as introduced, it was to be three-quarters elected by popular vote.
William O'Brien, a nationalist outside the IPP, supported both the 1904 devolution scheme and the 1907 bill as a step in the right direction, or "Home Rule by instalments". The IPP MPs were initially uncertain whether to oppose the bill outright or seek amendments to it. They voted for the first reading on 7 May, Redmond saying, "if this measure fulfilled certain conditions I laid down we should consider it an aid to Home Rule. I do not know whether it does or not till I have examined it." Dillon was sympathetic but the sudden death of his wife removed him from public debate. The Roman Catholic church in Ireland opposed what it viewed as increased state interference in education. Joseph Devlin and the Ancient Order of Hibernians also opposed it. The Irish Trades Union Congress opposed the proposed council as "a constitutional cripple, more likely than otherwise to hamper and irritate industrial improvement in Ireland". T. W. Russell, head of the "Russellite Unionists", supported the bill and alleged most unionists opposed it because it would end Protestant Ascendancy in the senior ranks of the Irish civil service. The antipathy within the UIL and from nationalists more generally forced Redmond's hand and he proposed the rejection motion at the UIL convention, which was overwhelmingly carried
MacDonnell retired shortly after the bill's failure. The Liberal Party decided there was no workable middle ground between the Union status quo and Home Rule, and put aside attempts to address Ireland's constitutional status. It was after the 1910 election and the Parliament Act 1911 that the Asquith ministry returned to the issue with the Third Home Rule Bill. Conor Mulvagh suggests the 1907 bill's failure fed into a current of disillusion and malaise in the IPP that opened the way for more advanced nationalist alternatives like Sinn Féin. William O'Brien wrote in 1923, "It is now obvious enough that, had the Irish Council Bill been allowed to pass, the Partition of Ireland would never have been heard of." The Spectator countered that unionists would never have been reconciled to the 1907 scheme.
Provisions
The Irish Council was to have 107 members, with a term of office of three years (four years for the initial Council):
82 members elected under the same franchise as the Local Government (Ireland) Act 1898, which applied to most men and some women. The 82 constituencies were based on the 103 Irish Westminster constituencies, except that county borough boundaries took priority over parliamentary borough boundaries, and constituencies with small populations were merged.
24 members appointed, in the first instance, by the King and, subsequently, by the Lord Lieutenant
The Under-Secretary was an ex-officio member
The Chief Secretary was not a member but had the right to attend and speak at proceedings.
The departments of the Irish administration to be transferred to the control of the council were:
Local Government Board for Ireland
Department of Agriculture and Technical Instruction for Ireland
Congested Districts Board for Ireland
Commissioners of Public Works in Ireland
Inspector of Reformatory and Industrial Schools
Registrar-General
Commissioners of National Education in Ireland
Intermediate Education Board for Ireland
Estates Commissioners (a function of the Irish Land Commission as successor to the Encumbered Estates' Court)
The possibility was provided for future transfer of authority for:
Loan Fund Board
Royal Irish Academy of Music
Irish National Gallery
Royal Hibernian Academy
Commissioner of Valuation and Boundary Surveyor
Commissioners of Education in Ireland (for endowed schools)
Commissioners of Irish Lights
Inspectors of Lunatic Asylums
The council would also have some financial powers, with a separate "Irish Treasury" and "Irish Fund". Joseph V. O'Brien describes these as "paltry".
The bill would also have abolished the prohibition on Roman Catholics serving as Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.
Footnotes
References
= Sources
=Primary
Hansard: "Irish Council Bill" index and "Irish Councils Bill" index
[Bill 182] Irish Council Bill. Parliamentary Papers. Vol. Session 1907, Vol. II. 1907. p. 481.
Secondary
Campbell, Fergus (September 2007). "Who Ruled Ireland? The Irish Administration, 1879–1914". The Historical Journal. 50 (3). Cambridge University Press: 623–644. doi:10.1017/S0018246X07006280. JSTOR 20175114. S2CID 162546437.
Hepburn, A. C. (September 1971). "The Irish Council Bill and the Fall of Sir Antony MacDonnell, 1906–7". Irish Historical Studies. 17 (68). Cambridge University Press: 470–498. doi:10.1017/S0021121400111629. JSTOR 30005305. S2CID 191738907.
Jalland, Patricia (June 1976). "A Liberal Chief Secretary and the Irish Question: Augustine Birrell, 1907–1914". The Historical Journal. 19 (2). Cambridge University Press: 421–451. doi:10.1017/S0018246X00010232. JSTOR 2638571. S2CID 159970678.
Morton, Grenfell (15 July 2014) [1980]. Home Rule and the Irish Question. Routledge. ISBN 9781317881094. Retrieved 22 November 2017.