local branches

Branches Demand

United Irish League branches pressed nationalist MPs to place national unity above personal disagreement as the organisation expanded during 1899. Founded at Westport in January 1898, the League combined agrarian agitation with a campaign to reconstruct the divided parliamentary movement. Local meetings and resolutions allowed tenant farmers, organisers and constituency workers to express impatience with leaders whose rivalries had weakened Irish representation since the fall of Charles Stewart Parnell. Branches possessed no constitutional power to command MPs, but their subscriptions, electoral labour and influence over candidate selection gave their appeals a force that Westminster politicians could not safely dismiss.

Now Sharing: Articles (154) Images (287) Total Items Archived (441)
Our Mission: 100,000 Items Total Percentage Achieved (0.44%)