Name and origin | |
---|---|
Official name of legislation | Government of Ireland Bill 1893 |
Location | Ireland |
Year | 1893 |
Government introduced | Gladstone (Liberal) |
Parliamentary passage | |
House of Commons passed? | Yes |
House of Lords passed? | No |
Royal Assent? | Not Applicable |
Defeated | |
Which House | House of Lords |
Which stage | 1st stage |
Final vote | Content: 41; Not content 419 |
Date | September 1893 |
Details of legislation | |
Legislature type | bicameral |
Unicameral subdivision | none |
Name(s) | upper: Legislative Council; lower: Legislative Assembly |
Size(s) | Council: 48 elected by high franchise Assembly: 103 members |
MPs in Westminster | 80 MPs |
Executive head | Lord Lieutenant |
Executive body | Executive Committee of the Privy Council of Ireland |
Prime Minister in text | none |
Responsible executive | no |
Enactment | |
Act implemented | not applicable |
Succeeded by | Government of Ireland Act 1914 |
The Government of Ireland Bill 1893 (known generally as the Second Home Rule Bill) was the second attempt made by Liberal Party leader William Ewart Gladstone, as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, to enact a system of home rule for Ireland. Unlike the first attempt, which was defeated in the House of Commons, the second Bill was passed by the Commons but vetoed by the House of Lords.
Gladstone had become personally committed to the granting of Irish home rule in 1885, a fact revealed (possibly accidentally) in what became known as the Hawarden Kite. Though his 1886 Home Rule Bill had caused him to lose power after members of his party left to form the Liberal Unionist Party, once re-appointed prime minister in August 1892 Gladstone committed himself to introducing a new Home Rule Bill for Ireland.
The Irish Parliamentary Party had divided in 1891 on the leadership of Charles Stewart Parnell (who died later in 1891), with a majority leaving the Irish National League to form the Irish National Federation, remaining divided until 1900.
As with the first bill, the second bill was controversially drafted in secret by Gladstone, who excluded both Irish MPs and his own ministry from participating in the drafting. The decision led to a serious factual error in the Bill, a mistake over the calculation of how much Ireland should contribute to the British Imperial Exchequer. The error in the calculation was £360,000, a vast sum for the time. The error was discovered during the Committee Stage of the Bill's passage through the Commons and forced a major revision of the financial proposals.
The Chancellor of the Exchequer, Sir William Harcourt, was himself alienated from the Bill having been excluded by Gladstone from its preparation, while the Chief Secretary for Ireland was engaged on other matters, and Gladstone, in the words of a historian, "increasingly disengaged".[citation needed] On 21 April, the Bill's second reading was approved by a majority of 347 to 304.
By the third reading on 1 September, 26 of the Bill's 37 clauses had still not been debated. A fist-fight developed on the opposition benches between Home Rule and Conservative MPs. The Bill, though passed by the Commons with a slimmer majority of 30, had lost much of its credibility. At that time all legislation could be negated by the Conservative Party–dominated House of Lords, and here it failed on a vote of 41 in favour and 419 against.[1]
The bill proposed:
A bicameral Irish parliament to control domestic affairs, made up of a Legislative Council and a Legislative Assembly.
Whereas the First Home Rule Bill provided for no Irish MPs at Westminster, the 1893 Bill allowed for the eighty Irish MPs to sit in Westminster; this would have been a reduction from the 103 MPs who were then in the United Kingdom House of Commons.
The Bill's second reading was passed by the House of Commons on 21 April 1893 by 347 votes to 304;[5] the final (third) reading was passed on 1 September 1893 by 301 to 267.[6] However, in the House of Lords the second reading was defeated on 8 September 1893 by 419 votes to 41.[7] This was a major stumbling block for the Irish MPs because the House of Lords was controlled by the Conservative Party and there would be little chance of it getting passed by them.
Gladstone retired soon afterwards. Some historians now suggest that Gladstone was the author of his own defeats on home rule, with his secretive drafting alienating supporters, and enabling serious flaws to appear in the text of his bills.[8]
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (April 2015) |
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