From the BBC:
“NI 100: What was the
Anglo-Irish Treaty?”
(Michael Collins leaves Downing
Street during treaty negotiations)
Exactly 100 years ago, after
months of negotiations, the British and Irish delegates gathered in the cabinet
room of 10 Downing Street in the early hours of the morning and signed the
Anglo-Irish Treaty. The document allowed for the creation of an independent
Irish Free State within the British Empire, with King George V as its head of
state. It also confirmed the partition of the island of Ireland and allowed
Northern Ireland to remain in existence if its parliament chose. The treaty was
highly controversial and ultimately led to civil war in Ireland between those
who supported it and those who opposed it, a war the pro-treaty side eventually
won.
So what was contained in the
treaty?
A new Irish state The very
first clause in the treaty said Ireland would become known as the Irish Free
State and would have the same constitutional status within the British Empire
as Australia, Canada, New Zealand and South Africa. Those countries,
known as dominions, had a high level of independence from Britain, but were not
fully independent countries as they are today. The Free State's
parliament would have powers "to make laws for the peace, order and good
government of Ireland and an executive responsible to that parliament".
Crucially, however, Northern Ireland - which came into existence in May
1921 - would have the option to opt out of this new state, which it ultimately
did. This meant the Free State ended up consisting of 26, not 32,
counties.
An oath to the King This
was one of the most controversial aspects of the treaty and many Irish
republicans refused to accept it. The Irish Free State's head of state
would be King George V and members of the new country's parliament would have
to swear an oath of allegiance to the constitution and fidelity to the king.
Northern Ireland's opt-out Ireland
had been partitioned into two entities - Northern Ireland and Southern Ireland
- when the Government of Ireland Act came into effect in May 1921. The
treaty theoretically applied to both parts of the island, but stated that the
powers of the parliament and government of the new Free State would not be
applicable in Northern Ireland until one month after the acts of parliament
needed to ratify the treaty had been passed. The treaty also said that
before this month had passed the Parliament of Northern Ireland could present
an address to the King asking that Northern Ireland be allowed to permanently
opt out. The Parliament of Northern Ireland did just this in December
1922. If it had not presented an address, Northern Ireland would have
continued to exist but as part of the Irish Free State rather than part of the
United Kingdom. The Irish Free State's parliament would have had the
power to make laws in any area not explicitly delegated to the Northern Ireland
Parliament.
A boundary commission If
Northern Ireland did opt out, a commission was to be set up to finalise the new
Irish border. The border that existed simply followed county boundaries
which separated the six counties of Northern Ireland from their neighbours in
the south. The commission was to determine that the border was "in
accordance with the wishes of the inhabitants, so far as may be compatible with
economic and geographic conditions". The commission met in 1924-25
but its recommendations were never implemented.
Defence and the Treaty Ports The
treaty stated that until a future agreement was struck, the Royal Navy would
continue to have responsibility for the seas around all of Ireland, although
the Irish Free State was allowed to have boats necessary for "protection
of the revenue or of the fisheries". Some ports were also to remain
under British control, with Britain able to obtain others in a time of war. The
ports which remained under British control in peacetime were Spike Island near
Queenstown (Cobh), Berehaven and Lough Swilly. These ports, which became
known as Treaty Ports, were handed over to Ireland in 1938.
What happened next? The
treaty had to be ratified by the UK Parliament and "a meeting of members
of Parliament elected for constituencies in Southern Ireland since the passing
of the Government of Ireland Act, 1920". Of the 128 members elected
in that poll, 124 were Sinn Féin candidates who set up the Second Dáil. It was
this assembly that debated the treaty. The UK House of Commons approved
the treaty on 16 December by 401 votes to 58 and, on the same day, the House of
Lords voted in favour by 166 to 47. The Dáil debates were extremely
divisive and after 10 days of debate the treaty was passed by a vote of 64 to
57. This narrow split spilled over into violence and the Irish Civil War
between the pro-treaty and anti-treaty sides broke out in June 1922.
^ 100 Years since the Anglo-Irish
Treaty created the horrible conditions that lead to The Troubles (1968-1998)
and the on-going Brexit Border Problems. Not something to celebrate. ^
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