ELECTIONS HELD IN 1997
<<< Return to the Historical Archive page of parliamentary election results for IRELAND <<<
Chamber: | |
Dail Eireann | |
|
|
6 June 1997 | |
|
|
Elections were held for all the seats of the Dail following the premature dissolution of this body on 15 May 1997. Dail elections had previously been held in November 1992. | |
|
|
Subsequent to the previous (November 1992) Dail elections, Prime Minister Albert Reynolds resigned as both leader of the Government and his party (Fianna Fail) in November 1994 and, the following month, a new three-party ruling "Rainbow Coalition" comprising Fine Gael, the Labour Party and the Democratic Left was formed, headed by Prime Minister John Bruton. Labour, led by Mr. Dick Spring, had in effect caused this change by withdrawing from the former two-party governing alliance and switching allegiances.
On 15 May 1997, Mr. Bruton (Fine Gael), riding the crest of an impressive economic record but trailing his opponents in opinion polls, called the premature elections for 6 June; the Dail was then dissolved and the campaign began. During the next three weeks, the main issues debated concerned taxes, crime, drugs, abortion, employment and the question of Northern Ireland. The outgoing Prime Minister urged support for his alliance on grounds of stability and policies, pointing to its performance while in power. Allied with the Progressive Democrats in a centre-right coalition, Mr. Bertie Ahern, leader of Fianna Fail, countered by promising to cut taxes, reduce crime and bolster the peace process in the British-ruled province of Northern Ireland. On 4 June, a televised debate took place between the two above-mentioned leaders. On polling day, the opposition's message apparently scored with the electors as it captured a total of 81 seats (77 by Fianna Fail, 4 by the Progressive Democrats) to 75 for the centre-left Rainbow Coalition. Although three seats short of an absolute majority, the victors looked to achieve this through the backing of some of the seven successful independents. Also triumphant was one candidate of Sinn Fein - the first seat the party had captured since the 1920s. On 26 June, Mr. Ahern was elected Prime Minister by the Dail. He heads a 16-member coalition Cabinet. Ms. Mary Harney, leader of the Progressive Democrats, is Deputy Premier, succeeding Mr. Spring. |
STATISTICS
Round no 1 (6 June 1997): Elections results | |
Number of registered electors | 2,741,262 |
Voters | 1,806,932 (65.9%) |
Blank or invalid ballot papers | 17,947 |
Valid votes | 1,788,985 |
Round no 1: Distribution of votes | |||
Political Group | First preference votes | % | |
Fianna Fail | 703,682 | 39.33 | |
Fine Gael | 499,936 | 27.95 | |
Labour Party | 186,044 | 10.40 | |
Progressive Democrats | 83,765 | 4.68 | |
Democratic Left | 44,901 | 2.51 | |
Green Alliance | 49,323 | 2.76 | |
Sinn Fein | 45,614 | 2.55 | |
Workers' Party | 7,808 | 0,44 | |
Others and Independents | 167,912 | 9.39 |
Round no 1: Distribution of seats | |||
Political Group | Total | Gain/Loss | |
Fianna Fail | 77 | +9 | |
Fine Gael | 54 | +11 | |
Labour Party | 17 | -14 | |
Progressive Democrats | 4 | -6 | |
Democratic Left | 4 | = | |
Green Alliance | 2 | +1 | |
Sinn Fein | 1 | +1 | |
Workers' Party | 0 | = | |
Others and Independents | 7 | n.a. |
Distribution of seats according to sex: | |
Men: | 146 |
Women: | 20 |
Percent of women: | 12.05 |
Copyright © 1997 Inter-Parliamentary Union