16 February1932: A General Election held in the Irish Free State on
this day. The president of the Executive Council, W.T. Cosgrave, [above] called the
election early as he wished to have it out of the way in time for the
Commonwealth Conference of that year. There was growing unrest in the country and he felt that
a fresh mandate was needed. He fought the
campaign on a programme of bringing political stability to the State and that a
change of Government would see people sympathetic to republicanism and
communism in power.
Eamon
De Valera on the other hand promised to free IRA prisoners, abolish the Oath to
the King of England and to reduce the powers of the Governor General. He also
indicated that more equitable social policies would be introduced at a time
when the Great Depression was in full swing.
In the event there was a change of Government and Eamon de Valera won
the contest. Fianna Fáil received 566,498 votes and won
72 seats as opposed to Cosgrave’s Cumann na nGaedhael, which got 449,506
votes and secured 57 seats. The Labour Party returned with just 7 seats on a
vote from 98,286 of the electorate. While De Valera was still five seats short
of an overall majority, he struck an informal deal with the Labour Party to
back him up. On that basis he was able to govern the Free State with a fair
deal of parliamentary political stability over the next few years.
This change of government marked a watershed in the history
of the State as De Valera went on to abolish the Oath to the King of England
and to give the polity a much more Republican flavour including a new
Constitution some years later. He remained in power through an unbroken series
of election victories until 1948.
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