Donegal Progressive Party

The Donegal Progressive Party was a minor party in the Republic of Ireland.

The party drew its support mostly from the Unionist community in County Donegal. It was opposed to a united Ireland. At the 1973 general election, the party's leader advised Protestants to vote for Fianna Fáil, as it had the most stable policy on the border question.[1] Throughout the 1980s, the party held a single seat on Donegal County Council, but it lost this at the 1999 local elections.[2]

Jim Devenney, a butcher and member of the East Donegal Ulster Scots Association and the former deputy chairman of the Ulster - Scots Agency,[3] was the party's final representative, also contested Donegal North–East at the 1992 and 1997 general elections, and stood in Letterkenny again in 2004.[4] The party was removed from the Register of Political Parties in November 2009.[5]

References

  1. James Knight and Nicolas Baxter-Moore, Republic of Ireland: The General Elections of 1969 and 1973
  2. Protestants lose out in the Republic Grand Orange Order Lodge website, October 1998.
  3. About Us - East Donegal Ulster Scots Association - Official Website
  4. Jim Devenney, ElectionsIreland.org
  5. Coughlan, Kieran (20 November 2009). "Electoral Acts 1992 and 2001: Register of Political Parties" (PDF). Iris Oifigiúil (Dublin: Government Publications Office): 1509. Retrieved 5 April 2016.


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