The general election took place in 41 parliamentary constituencies throughout the Republic of Ireland for 166 seats in the lower house of parliament, Dáil Éireann.
Campaign
The first general election of 1982 was caused by the sudden collapse of the Fine Gael-Labour coalition government when the budget was defeated. The Minister for Finance John Bruton, attempted to put VAT on children shoes, a measure which was rejected by some left-wing independent TDs. The Taoiseach Garret FitzGerald, dissolved the Dáil immediately, however, while he was with President Patrick Hillery at Áras an Uachtaráin a number of Fianna Fáil members attempted to ring the President, urging him not to grant a dissolution. If he refused a dissolution, FitzGerald would have to resign and Fianna Fáil would be invited to form a government. While the attempt to contact the President was highly unconstitutional, (the President can only take advice from the Taoiseach) a dissolution was granted and the general election campaign began in earnest.The campaign was largely fought on economic issues. Spending cuts were a reality for whatever party won, but the scale of the cuts were played down by all parties. Fine Gael continued its policies that it had been implementing while in office. The Fianna Fáil leader Charles Haughey dismissed the budget cuts when the campaign first began, however, the reality soon became apparent and the party adopted similar policies that involved budget cuts.
Result
| 23rd Irish General Election – 18 February 1982 | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Party | Leader | # of Seats | Gains/ Losses | % of Dáil | % of Votes | |
| Fianna Fáil | Charles Haughey | 81 | +4 | 48.8 | 47.3 | |
| Fine Gael | Garret FitzGerald | 63 | -2 | 38.0 | 37.3 | |
| Labour Party | Michael O'Leary | 15 | +0 | 9.0 | 9.1 | |
| Sinn Féin the Workers Party | Tomás Mac Giolla | 3 | +2 | 1.8 | 2.2 | |
| Independents/Others | 3 | -2 | 1.8 | 4.1 | ||
| (Anti H-Block) | 0 | -2 | - | (Did not run any candidates) | ||
| Ceann Comhairle (Speaker) | 1 | - | 0.6 | - | ||
| Totals | 166 | 100.0 | 100.0 | |||
| Fianna Fáil minority government formed. | ||||||
Fianna Fáil emerged as the largest party and looked most likely to form a government. However, internal divisions within the party threatened Charles Haughey's nomination for Taoiseach. In the end a leadership challenge did not take place and Haughey was the party's nominee for Taoiseach. Haughey gained the support of the Independent TD, Tony Gregory, the Independent Fianna Fáil TD Neil Blaney and the three Workers Party deputies and was appointed Taoiseach.
First time TDs
A total of 21 TDs were elected for the first time in this election:- Michael Ahern
- Thomas Bellew
- Gerry Brady (Kildare)
- Edward Brennan
- Matt Brennan
- Richard Bruton
- Sean Byrne
- Donal Carey
- James Corr
- Proinsias De Rossa
- Frank Fahey
- Alexis FitzGerald
- Patrick Gallagher
- Tony Gregory
- Colm Hilliard
- Gemma Hussey
- Michael Lynch
- Maurice Manning
- Dinny McGinley
- Liam Naughten
- Willie O'Dea
The following 2 TDs were elected in subsequent by-elections:
Retiring TDs
- James Tully
- Richie Ryan
- John Connor (Lost seat)
- Carrie Acheson (Lost seat)
- Peadar Clohessy (Lost seat)
- Hugh Byrne (FG) (Lost seat)
- Madeleine Taylor-Quinn (FG) (Lost seat)
- Fergus O'Brien (FG) (Lost seat)
See also
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Last updated on Sunday February 03, 2008 at 14:46:29 PST (GMT -0800)
View this article at Wikipedia.org - Edit this article at Wikipedia.org - Donate to the Wikimedia Foundation
Copyright © 2008, Dictionary.com, LLC. All rights reserved.











