Irish general election, 1933
Irish general election, 1933
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Percentage of seats gained by each of the three major parties, and number of seats gained by smaller parties and independents. |
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The Irish general election of 1933 was held on 24 January 1933. The newly elected members of the 8th Dáil assembled at Leinster House on 8 February when the new President of the Executive Council and Executive Council of the Irish Free State were appointed. Fianna Fáil retained power, though fell one seat short of an overall majority.
The general election took place in 30 parliamentary constituencies throughout the Irish Free State for 153 seats in the lower house of parliament, Dáil Éireann.
Result
8th Irish general election – 24 January 1933[1][2][3]
Party |
Leader |
Seats |
± |
% of seats |
First Pref votes |
% FPv |
±% |
|
Fianna Fáil |
Éamon de Valera |
77 |
+5 |
50.3 |
689,054 |
49.7 |
+5.2 |
|
Cumann na nGaedheal |
W. T. Cosgrave |
48 |
–9 |
31.4 |
422,495 |
30.5 |
–4.8 |
|
National Centre Party |
Frank MacDermot |
11 |
New |
7.2 |
126,909 |
9.2 |
– |
|
Labour Party |
William Norton |
8 |
+1 |
5.2 |
79,221 |
5.7 |
–2.0 |
|
Independent |
N/A |
9 |
–5 |
5.9 |
68,882 |
5.0 |
–5.4 |
Spoilt votes |
14,707 |
— |
— |
Total |
153 |
0 |
100 |
1,401,265 |
100 |
— |
Electorate/Turnout |
1,727,680 |
81.3% |
— |
- Fianna Fáil minority government formed.
Excluding the Ceann Comhairle (speaker), Fianna Fáil, had won exactly half the seats and formed a government with support from the Labour Party, eventually winning enough by-elections to govern without Labour Party support.
First time TDs
Re-elected TDs
Outgoing TDs
See also
References
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| | | Executive | |
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| Legislative | |
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| Judiciary | |
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| Elections | |
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| See also | |
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