Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

1973 Northern Ireland local elections

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1973 Northern Ireland local elections
Remove ads

Local government in Northern Ireland was reorganised in 1973 by the Local Government (Boundaries) Act (Northern Ireland) 1971 and the Local Government Act (Northern Ireland) 1972. The county councils, county borough and municipal borough corporations and urban and rural district councils were replaced by twenty-six local government districts.

tOP

Quick facts All 526 seats to 26 local authorities, First party ...

Elections took place for all the seats on the district councils on 30 May 1973. Elections were by proportional representation, using the single transferable vote system. The district councils came into their powers on 1 October.[1][2][3][4]

Remove ads

Results

Summarize
Perspective

Overall

More information Party, Councillors ...

On 21 March 1973, Ian Paisley, William Craig and Laurence Orr announced the creation of a united front to oppose the White Paper, a British government document that had proposed a power-sharing administration and a Council of Ireland to replace the Parliament of Northern Ireland.[10]

Craig and Paisley had initially announced that their parties would not be contesting the local elections[11] - but in practice, candidates from their parties did run, under their own party banners, but in many cases they opted to run under various 'loyalist' labels instead alongside anti-White Paper UUP members, non-party unionists, and localist unionists. The 'loyalist' labels included 'Loyalist', 'United Loyalist', 'Loyalist Coalition', 'Unionist Unity',[6] 'United Unionist'[6] and 'United Loyalist Coalition'.

Depending on the area, the candidates under the various 'loyalist' labels were supported by a coalition of some or all of Vanguard, the DUP, anti-White Paper UUP members, the Loyalist Association of Workers, the Orange Order, the Ulster Defence Association, the Loyalist Defence Volunteers,[12] the Ulster Special Constabulary Association, and the Ulster Protestant Volunteers.[13] In some cases, candidates under the DUP and Vanguard banners were running in the same areas as candidates under the various 'loyalist' labels.

In this election, many UUP candidates used the label "Unionist", while others used the label "Official Unionist". Candidates under both labels were identified as being UUP candidates by contemporary sources, with the difference in some places signifying whether the candidate supported the "official" party line on the White Paper.[14][15]

Party seats by council

More information Council, UUP(U) ...

Votes by council

More information UUP(U), SDLP (N) ...
Remove ads

Notes

  1. Includes candidates labelled "Official Unionist" and "Unionist".
  2. Includes candidates labelled "United Loyalist", "Loyalist", "Loyalist Coalition", "United Loyalist Coalition", "Unionist Unity", "United Unionist" and "Unionist Coalition". Usually endorsed by Vanguard, the DUP, or both, depending on area.
  3. Includes candidates labelled "Non Party", "Non Party Community", "Independent Ratepayer", "Non Party Independent Radical", "Non Party Tenants and Community Association", "Non Party Abolish 11 Plus", "Non Party Sports and Development Council", and "Independent Labour".
  4. Includes candidates labelled as "Loyalist and Democratic Unionist".
  5. Includes candidates nominated as "Republican" and "Official Republican". Contemporary sources indicate both labels refer to Republican Clubs candidates.
  6. Includes candidates labelled as "Vanguard Loyalist", with the exception of one candidate in Down, for whom the Belfast Telegraph deemed it erroneous to describe as VUPP.
  7. Includes candidates labelled "Independent Unionist", "Independent United Loyalist" and a single "Vanguard Loyalist" in Down (a contemporary report from the Belfast Telegraph suggests it is erroneous to refer to this candidate as a VUPP candidate).
Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads