Background to, and the 1918 General Election (Ireland)

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Background to, and the 1918 General Election (Ireland)

At the 1917 Sinn Fein Party Conference, all the parties that opposed British rule in Ireland agreed on a common policy, to work for the establishment of an Irish Republic. Arthur Griffith stood down and De Valera was elected President of both Sinn Fein and later of The Irish Volunteers. Sinn Fein's opposition to compulsory conscription to The Great War greatly enhanced its popularity with the people. Compulsorary military conscription was, in fact, never introduced in Ireland. Sinn Fein promised that its elected members would not sit in the British Parliament, but would form their own government in Dublin in the forthcoming General Election in November 1918, after 'The First World War" had ended. They wanted international recognition for The Irish Republic at the imminent Paris Peace Convention. They also vowed to undermine British rule in Ireland. In the 1918 General Election, Sinn Fein won seventy-three seats and the Unionists twenty-six, while the Home Rulers won only six.

The new Irish Parliament assembled for the first time on the 21st of January 1919 in Dublin's Mansion House. As many of the elected Members were in prison at the time, only twenty-seven were able to attend. It was planned that Sinn Fein should take over the running of the country such as the local government bodies and leave the British administration to wither away. This plan of passive resistance worked in many areas outside East Ulster. However, the conflict soon escalated into violence, following the 1919 Soloheadbeg Ambush in County Tipperary.

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Volunteers attacked many rural RIC (Royal Irish Constabulary) police barracks throughout 1919 and 1920. The police withdrew into the larger towns for their own safety, leaving large areas of the country in control of the Republicans.

The British responded by banning Sinn Fein. They then increased the numbers of the Army and Police in Ireland. Michael Collins became Minister for Finance and Director of Intelligence for the Volunteers. Collins formed a group called "The Squad" to kill informers and Dublin Castle detectives (who were known as "G-men"), which hampered the British attempts to obtain intelligence information on Volunteer activities. ...

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