Clann na Poblachta ([kˠɫan̪ˠ n̪ˠə pʷɔbʷɫəxt̪ˠə] – English: Family of the Republic) was an Irish republican and social democratic political party founded by former Irish Republican Army Chief of Staff Seán MacBride in 1946.
In 1946, MacBride founded a new political party called Clann na
Poblachta. The party was launched officially on 6 July 1946 in Barry's
Hotel in Dublin. It held its first Ard Fheis in November 1947 in the Balalaika Ballroom.
The party appealed to disillusioned young urban voters, and republicans. Many had become alienated from Éamon de Valera's Fianna Fáil, the main republican party in Ireland but which in the view of more militant republicans had betrayed their principles during World War II by executing IRA prisoners. Clann na Poblachta also drew support from people who were tired of the old civil war politics and wanted more concern for social issues. In post-war Europe many people blamed the social evils of unemployment, poor housing, poverty and disease for the rise of fascism and communism.
This new mood influenced people in Ireland also. Some people saw Clann
na Poblachta as a replacement for Fianna Fáil. Others a replacement for
the marginalised Sinn Féin, more a break from the traditional pro- and anti-treaty Irish Civil War division. The new party grew rapidly during 1947.
The party was influenced by social democratic policies such as United States President Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal, Clement Attlee's welfare state, elements of European Christian Democracy as well as Republicanism. It attracted a diverse range of people from traditional Republicans such as Noel Hartnett and social democrats such as Dr. Noel Browne, who had been attracted to the party due to its commitment to fight Tuberculosis and Peadar Cowan, a former Labour Party executive member who had resigned in disgust due to the infighting within the Labour Party at the time.
Clann were formed at a time during a period of turmoil in Irish politics - Fianna Fáil (FF) and Fine Gael
- the two major parties of the state - were weak. Fine Gael were in
disarray because of their rival's seemingly hegemonic dominance and
because of a perceived failure to be able offer anything to
disillusioned FF supporters. FF were visibly losing support because of
the failure of the party's republican programme to end mass
unemployment, poverty and emigration. The Labour Party had bitterly split in 1944 over personal differences between William X. O'Brien and James Larkin while Clann na Talmhan was perceived as being too specialist and too focused on the needs of farmers.
In October 1947, Clann na Poblachta won two by-elections (in Dublin County and Tipperary). The Taoiseach, de Valera, saw the threat posed by the new party and in February 1948 he called a snap general election
to try and catch Clann na Poblachta off guard. At the time Clann had,
not entirely unrealistic, hopes of both replacing Fianna Fáil as the
majority republican party and as the leading party of the state. de
Valera's tactic was successful; Clann na Poblachta only won ten seats -
far fewer than was expected. De Valera may have saved his party's
dominance, but the election did produce enough seats among the
opposition groups for them to be able to form a non-Fianna Fáil
government, the first time in sixteen years. That First Inter-Party Government was made up of Fine Gael, Labour, National Labour, Clann na Talmhan, Clann na Poblachta, and some independents.
Clann had stood on the platform of "get them out" and so clearly a
coalition with Fianna Fáil was not an option - even if the larger party
would consider it. But the republicans in Clann were unwilling to serve
under Fine Gael and in particular under Fine Gael's leader Richard Mulcahy who was a Free State general during the Civil War. At the suggestion of William Norton, the Labour leader, it was agreed that no party leader would be Taoiseach. Former Cumann na nGaedhael Attorney-General John A. Costello became Fine Gael's choice for Taoiseach. Labour's William Norton became Tánaiste while MacBride of Clann na Poblachta became Minister for External Affairs. Clann was an uneasy coalition of socialists and republicans and to placate the left wing, MacBride appointed Noel Browne
as Minister for Health. However many of the party's republicans
remained unreconciled to serving with Fine Gael and the very act of
joining the government weakened the party.
As Minister for External Affairs, and a strong republican, MacBride was seen as instrumental in the repeal of the External Relations Act 1936, under which King George VI, proclaimed King of Ireland in December 1936, fulfilled the diplomatic functions of a head of state. In September 1948 Costello made the formal announcement in Canada that the government was about to declare Ireland a Republic. At Easter 1949 the Republic of Ireland came into existence, with the King's remaining functions granted instead to the President of Ireland.
MacBride regarded Ireland as a republic in any case (in much the same
way as de Valera did) and saw the repeal of the Act as merely removing
the last vestiges of the British connection. He was, though, deeply
angry that Costello had stolen his idea and refused to attend the
official ceremony marking the inauguration of the Republic of Ireland.
The Government and opposition jointly mounted what it called the Anti-Partition Campaign,
arguing the opinion that partition was the only obstacle preventing a
united Ireland. At foreign conferences Irish delegates stated their
cause for the ending of partition. This campaign had no effect
whatsoever on the unionist government in Northern Ireland.
MacBride was Minister of External Affairs when the Council of Europe was drafting the European Convention on Human Rights.
He served as President of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of
Europe from 1949 to 1950 and is credited with being a key force in
securing the acceptance of this convention, which was finally signed in
Rome on 4 November 1950. In 1950, he was president of the Council of
Foreign Ministers of the Council of Europe, and he was vice-president of
the Organisation for European Economic Co-operation in 1948–51. He was responsible for Ireland not joining the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO).
As Minister for External Affairs, MacBride declined the offer of Ireland joining NATO to resist Soviet aggression. He refused because it would mean that the Republic recognised Northern Ireland. He did however state that Ireland was strongly opposed to Communism. In 1950, he offered a bi-lateral alliance to the United States but this was rejected. Ireland remained outside the military alliance. In 1949 Ireland joined the Organisation For European Economic Co-Operation and the Council of Europe as founder-members.
MacBride also argued for the "return of sterling assets" to Ireland-essentially a decoupling of the Irish pound from Pound sterling by selling British gilts
and investing the money in domestic enterprise. Officials in the Irish
Finance department, who had an excellent relationship with the British Treasury
and thought a decoupling would isolate Ireland and discourage
investment, resisted. The matter came to a head at the time of the 1949 devaluation
of sterling. Despite two government meetings to discuss decoupling, it
was decided to retain the sterling link - which remained until 1979.
Clann na Poblachta TD
and Health Minister Browne, proved highly controversial. A medical
doctor, he became famous for two policies. He spearheaded a successful
anti-tuberculosis (TB) campaign. Free mass X-rays were introduced to identify TB sufferers. Sufferers were given free hospital
treatment. New drugs were also introduced to fight the disease. Though
Browne made a significant contribution to the campaign, it had actually
originated with a Parliamentary Secretary (junior minister) in de
Valera's government, Conn Ward;
it was Ward's preparatory work and Browne's practical implementation
that produced the acclaimed scheme that practically wiped out TB in
Ireland.
Browne's second initiative was much more controversial. In 1950
Browne tried to put the parts of the Fianna Fáil Health Act into effect.
This Act would give free health care to all mothers and children up to
the age of sixteen regardless of income. However, the Mother and Child Scheme, as it became known, faced stiff opposition from Irish doctors and the Catholic Bishops
of Ireland. Doctors opposed the deal because they feared a reduction in
their incomes and they were worried about state interference between
patient and doctor. The Catholic Bishops opposed the Act because it
seemed a dangerously communistic idea to them. They feared it might lead
to the supply of birth control and abortion.
Browne met with the Bishops and thought that he had satisfied them.
However his handling of the affair alienated possible supporters in the
hierarchy, notably Bishop William J. Philbin,
and those elements of the medical profession privately supportive of
the Mother and Child Scheme. In addition his poor attendance at cabinet
meetings and strained relationships with cabinet colleagues meant that
they too failed to support him. On 11 April 1951 MacBride as party
leader demanded Browne's resignation and he withdrew from the Cabinet.
Several other Clann na Poblachta TDs followed him out of the coalition
and so destroyed the fragile internal unity of the party.
In 1951 the coalition faced increasing pressure to remain afloat and
so an election was called. Clann na Poblachta was reduced to just two
seats. Noel Browne and Jack McQuillan,
both of whom were elected as independents, supported de Valera's
minority government. In 1954 another general election was called and the
Second Inter-Party Government
took office, again under Costello as Taoiseach. Although Clann na
Poblachta agreed to give external confidence and support to the
government, it did not join it.
In keeping with the republican views of many of its key supporters,
Clann had throughout maintained close links with republicans in Northern
Ireland who espoused similar views, accepting the 1937 Constitution
and the government operating under it as legitimate in the twenty-six
counties (differing from Sinn Féin on this issue) but keeping open the
option of armed struggle in Northern Ireland. The most prominent link of
this kind was between the Clann and Liam Kelly and his Fianna Uladh organisation, even though Kelly and the Fianna Uladh's armed wing (Saor Uladh) were engaged in a military campaign in Northern Ireland. In 1954 the Clann made Kelly's election to Seanad Éireann (courtesy of Fine Gael councillors' votes) a condition for supporting the Second Inter-Party Government. Kelly had been imprisoned at the time for making a seditious speech.
The Government's increasing firm action against the IRA, who had just launched the Border Campaign,
was one of the main reasons why the Clann withdrew its support at the
beginning of 1957, along with a sharp deterioration in the economy.
In the 1957 election, MacBride lost his Dáil seat and his failure to secure a seat in two subsequent by-elections ended his political career. The party contested the 1961 general election but only one candidate was elected to Dáil Éireann. John Tully for Cavan was the only Clann na Poblachta TD elected in the 1965 general election.
The party entered talks with the Labour Party about a possible merger, however these ended in failure as they could not agree on the focus of the party and whether Sinn Féin or the National Progressive Democrats could be included. At the party Ard Fheis on 10 July 1965 the party voted to dissolve itself.
No comments:
Post a Comment