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Dáil Éireann

Coordinates:53°20′26″N6°15′14″W / 53.34055°N 6.254021°W /53.34055; -6.254021
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lower house of the Oireachtas (Irish parliament)
This article is about the current Irish body. For the historical legislatures, seeDáil Éireann (Irish Republic) andDáil Éireann (Irish Free State).

Dáil Éireann
34th Dáil
Coat of arms or logo
Type
Type
Term limits
None
History
Established29 December 1937 (Modern form)
Preceded byDáil Éireann (Irish Free State)
Leadership
Simon Harris, FG
since 23 January 2025
Mary Butler, FF
since 23 January 2025
Hildegarde Naughton, FG
since 23 January 2025
Mary Lou McDonald, SF
since 23 January 2025
Structure
Seats174
Political groups
Government (90)
  Fianna Fáil (48)
  Fine Gael (37)
  Independent (5)

Supported by (4)

  Independent (4)[1]

Opposition (78)

  Sinn Féin (39)
  Social Democrats (11)
  Labour (11)
 Inds. and Smaller Parties Group (6)[a]
  PBP–Solidarity (3)
  Green (1)
  100% Redress (1)
 Independents (1)[b]
 Independent Group (7)[a]
  Independent Ireland (4)
  Aontú (2)
  Independent (1)
  Independent (2)
Ceann Comhairle
 Ceann Comhairle (1)
  Vacant (2)
Committees
  • Business
  • Members' Interests of Dáil Éireann
  • Parliamentary Privileges and Oversight (Dáil)
  • Public Accounts
  • Standing Orders and Dáil Reform
Joint committees
  • Agriculture, Food and the Marine
  • Autism
  • Children, Disability, Equality, Integration, and Youth
  • Disability Matters
  • Education, Further and Higher Education, Research, Innovation, and Science
  • Enterprise, Trade and Employment
  • Environment and Climate Action
  • European Union Affairs
  • Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform, and Taoiseach
  • Foreign Affairs and Defence
  • Gender Equality
  • Implementation of the Good Friday Agreement
  • Irish Language, Gaeltacht and the Irish-speaking Community
  • Health
  • Housing, Local Government and Heritage
  • Justice
  • Public Petitions
  • Social Protection, Community and Rural Development and the Islands
  • Transport and Communications
  • Tourism, Culture, Arts, Sport and Media
Length of term
No more than 5 years[c]
AuthorityArticles 16−17, Constitution of Ireland
Salary€113,679 per year[2] plus expenses[3]
Elections
Proportional representation (single transferable vote)
Last election
29 November 2024
Next election
By January 2030
RedistrictingAdvisory recommendations made by theElectoral Commission
Meeting place
Dáil Chamber
Leinster House,Kildare Street, Dublin
Website
www.oireachtas.ie
Constitution
Constitution of Ireland
Rules
Dáil Éireann – Standing Orders Relative to Public Business 2024
Footnotes
  1. ^abTechnical group formed for parliamentary speaking rights. This is not a political alliance, but a parliamentary group.
  2. ^IncludesSéamus Healy who is a member of theWorkers and Unemployed Action party but was elected as an independent candidate.
  3. ^Under the Constitution, thePresident may dissolve the Dáil on the Taoiseach's discretional advice; they may refuse this advice if the Taoiseach has lost the Dáil's confidence.

Dáil Éireann (/dɑːlˈɛərən/ dahlAIR-ən;[4]Irish:[ˌd̪ˠaːlʲˈeːɾʲən̪ˠ],lit.'Assembly of Ireland') is thelower house and principal chamber of theOireachtas, which also includes thepresident of Ireland and asenate calledSeanad Éireann.[5] It consists of 174 members, each known as aTeachta Dála (pluralTeachtaí Dála, commonly abbreviated as TDs). TDs represent 43constituencies and are directly elected for terms not exceeding five years, on the system ofproportional representation using thesingle transferable vote (PR-STV). Its powers are similar to those of lower houses under many otherbicameralparliamentary systems and it is by far the dominant branch of the Oireachtas. Subject to the limits imposed by theConstitution of Ireland, it has the power to pass any law it wishes, and to nominate and remove theTaoiseach (head of government). Since 1922, it has met inLeinster House inDublin.

The Dáil took its current form when the1937 Constitution was adopted, but it maintains continuity with theFirst Dáil established in 1919.

Composition

[edit]

The Dáil has 174 members.[6] The number is set within the limits of theConstitution of Ireland, which sets a minimum ratio of one member per 20,000 of the population, and a maximum of one per 30,000. Under current legislation, members are directly elected for terms not exceeding five years by the people ofIreland under a system ofproportional representation known as thesingle transferable vote. Currently everyDáil constituency elects three, four or five TDs.

Membership of the Dáil is open to Irish citizens who are 21 or older.[7] A member of the Dáil is aTeachta Dála and is known generally as a TD or Deputy.

The Dáil electorate consists of Irish and British citizens over 18 years of age who are registered to vote in Ireland.[8] Under the Constitution a general election for Dáil Éireann must occur once in every seven years, but an earlier maximum of five years is set by the Electoral Act 1992.[9] TheTaoiseach (head of government or prime minister) can, at any time, make a request to thepresident to dissolve the Dáil, in which case a general election must occur within thirty days. The President may refuse to grant the dissolution to a Taoiseach who has ceased to retain the support of a majority in the Dáil; to date, no request for a dissolution has been refused.

Elections

[edit]

The STV electoral system broadly produces proportional representation in the Dáil. The lowdistrict magnitude of the constituencies used, however, usually gives a small advantage to the larger parties and under-represents smaller parties. Since the 1990s the norm has been coalition governments. Prior to 1989, single-party governments byFianna Fáil were common. The multi-seat constituencies required by STV mean that candidates must often compete for election with others from the same party. This system offers wide voter choice but is accused by some of producing TDs who are excessively parochial. By-elections occur under thealternative vote system. Proposals toamend the constitution to change to thefirst-past-the-post system were rejected in referendumsin 1959 andin 1968.

Currently everyDáil constituency elects three, four or five TDs. The constitution specifies that no constituency may return fewer than three TDs but does not specify any upper limit to constituency magnitude. However, statute specifies a maximum of five seats per constituency.[10] The constitution requires that constituency boundaries be reviewed at least once in every twelve years, so that boundaries may be redrawn to accommodate changes in population. Boundary changes are drafted by theElectoral Commission − which from 2023 replaced a judge-ledConstituency Commission appointed for each review − and its recommendations are implemented by law.Malapportionment is forbidden by the constitution. Under the Constitution, the commission is required to refer to the most recent Census when considering boundary changes.

Number of members

[edit]
Number of members
DáilElectionTDs
1st1918105
2nd1921180
3rd1922128
4th1923153
5thJun. 1927153
6thSep. 1927153
7th1932153
8th1933153
9th1937138
10th1938138
11th1943138
12th1944138
13th1948147
14th1951147
15th1954147
16th1957147
17th1961144
18th1965144
19th1969144
20th1973144
21st1977148
22nd1981166
23rdFeb. 1982166
24thNov. 1982166
25th1987166
26th1989166
27th1992166
28th1997166
29th2002166
30th2007166
31st2011166
32nd2016158
33rd2020160
34th2024174

There are currently 174 TDs in the Dáil. This figure was provided by theElectoral (Amendment) Act 2023 and has been in place since the2024 general election. This follows a recommendation of theElectoral Commission in August 2023. This gives an average representation of 29,593 people per TD, based on the 2022 census.[11]

Layout

[edit]

The Dáil chamber has confrontational benches but the end segment is curved to create a partialhemicycle. The government TDs sit on the left of theCeann Comhairle, with the main opposition party on their right. The Chamber was adapted for use as a Parliament from its former use as a lecture theatre.

Duration

[edit]

TheFirst Dáil was established on 21 January 1919 as the single-chamber parliament of theIrish Republic. One of the first actions of the Dáil was to ratify a constitution, commonly known as theDáil Constitution. As a provisional constitution it made no reference to the length of the term of each Dáil. The first and second Dáil existed under the provisions of this constitution. Neither was recognised by the British government or the governments of other countries as the lawful parliament of Ireland.

On 6 December 1922, following the signing of the 1921Anglo-Irish Treaty which brought the Irish War of Independence to an end, the single chamber Dáil became the lower house of a new bicameral Oireachtas, the parliament of the newly establishedIrish Free State.

Article 28 of theConstitution of the Irish Free State (1922) set the maximum term for the Dáil at four years. This wasamended in 1927 from four years to six years "or such shorter period as may be fixed by legislation".[12] Later that same year, this period was fixed in law as a duration of "five years reckoned from the date of the first meeting of Dáil Éireann after the last previous dissolution".[13]

On 29 December 1937, on the coming into force of the newConstitution of Ireland, the Irish Free State ceased to exist and was replaced by a new state called Ireland. Article 16.5 of the 1937 Constitution states, "Dáil Éireann shall not continue for a longer period than seven years from the date of its first meeting: a shorter period may be fixed by law". The period in law remained at five years. Since the coming into force of the 1937 constitution, no Irish government has proposed changing the maximum term of the Dáil, which still remains five years and was reconfirmed by legislation in 1992, which stated, "The same Dáil shall not continue for a longer period than five years from the date of its first meeting".[9] Consequently, the maximum term for the Dáil is five years from the date it first met following the last general election.

Dissolution

[edit]

Article 16.3.2° of theConstitution of Ireland (1937) provides that an election for the membership of Dáil Éireann must take place no later than 30 days after a dissolution of the current Dáil. Article 16.4.2° requires that the newly elected Dáil Éireann must convene no later than 30 days after the election. As such, the maximum period of time between a dissolution of Dáil Éireann before a general election and the meeting of the new Dáil after a general election is 60 days.

The procedure and timetable for the dissolution of Dáil Éireann, pursuant to a general election, and the date for the reassembly of the newly elected Dáil, after the election, is set out in the Constitution of Ireland. Article 13.2.1° states that "Dáil Éireann shall be summoned and dissolved by the President on the advice of the Taoiseach". Therefore, the timing of a general election rests with the Taoiseach of the day.

Once so advised by the Taoiseach, the President issues a proclamation which specifies the date on which the current Dáil is dissolved, and the date on which the newly elected Dáil must first meet.

The timing for polling day in a general election is decided on by the Taoiseach. However, this is governed within a specified statutory framework. Once the presidential proclamation is issued, theMinister for Housing, Local Government and Heritage sets, by way of a ministerial order, the date and time of polling day in the election.

Section 39(1) of the Electoral Act 1992 states:[14]

"Where the Dáil is dissolved, the Clerk of the Dáil shall, immediately upon the issue of the Proclamation dissolving the Dáil, issue a writ to each returning officer for a constituency directing him to cause an election to be held of the full number of members of the Dáil to serve in the Dáil for that constituency."

Section 96 of the Electoral Act 1992 (as amended) states:[15][16]

"(1) A poll at a Dáil election—
(a) shall be taken on such day as shall be appointed by the Minister by order, being a day which (disregarding any excluded day) is not earlier than the eighteenth day or later than the twenty-fifth day next following the day on which the writ or writs for the election is or are issued,
(b) shall continue for such period, not being less than twelve hours, between the hours of 7 a.m. and 10.30 p.m. as may be fixed by the Minister by order, subject to the restriction that, in the case of a general election, he shall fix the same period for all constituencies.
(2) An order under this section shall be published in theIris Oifigiúil as soon as may be after it is made."

For the purposes of the Act an "excluded day" means a day which is a Sunday, Good Friday or a day which is declared to be a public holiday by the Holidays (Employees) Act 1973, or a day which by virtue of a statute or proclamation is a public holiday.[17]

Therefore, if the Dáil were dissolved on a Tuesday 1 February (in a non-leap year), and the writs for elections issued by the Clerk of the Dáil on that day, then the earliest date for polling day would be Tuesday 22 February (18 days later, excluding Sundays) and the latest date for polling would be Wednesday 2 March (25 days after, excluding Sundays), with polling stations being open for a minimum 12-hour period between the hours of 7am and 10.30pm on polling day (as set out in the ministerial order). In such a scenario, the latest date by which the newly elected Dáil must assemble would be Thursday 24 March (for a 22 February polling date), or Friday 1 April (for a 2 March polling date).

Title

[edit]

The nameDáil Éireann is taken from theIrish language but is the official title of the body in both English and Irish, including in both language versions of theIrish constitution. Since the Dáil was first established in 1919, it has also been described variously as a "National Assembly", a "Chamber of Deputies"[18] and a "House of Representatives".

Adáil means a "meeting, tryst or encounter of any kind".[19] Article 15 of the1937 Constitution describes the body as "a House of Representatives to be called Dáil Éireann" (Teach Ionadóirí ar a dtugtar Dáil Éireann).[5][20]

The wordDáil is accompanied by the definite article, butDáil Éireann is not; one speaks of "the Dáil" but not "the Dáil Éireann".[citation needed] The plural ofDáil in the English language is most commonlyDáils, although the Irish-language pluralDálaí[21] is sometimes encountered in English. As there is only ever one Dáil in existence at any one time, the plural is used when referring to the Dáil after different elections; for example, when referring to theFirst andSecond Dáils.[citation needed]

Ceann Comhairle

[edit]
Main article:Ceann Comhairle

TheCeann Comhairle is the chairperson, or presiding member, of the Dáil. The Ceann Comhairle is chosen from among TDs but is required to observe strict impartiality. Despite this, the government will usually try to select one of its own for the position, if its numbers allow. To protect the neutrality of the chair, an incumbent Ceann Comhairle does not seek re-election as a TD but rather is deemed automatically to have been re-elected by their constituency at a general election, unless they are retiring. The Ceann Comhairle does not vote except in the event of a tie. The current Ceann Comhairle is independent TDVerona Murphy.

Powers

[edit]

While the Dáil is one of three components of the Oireachtas, the other two being thePresident of Ireland andSeanad Éireann, the powers the constitution grants to the Dáil render it by far the dominant branch, meaning that most bills passed by the Dáil will ultimately become law. The president, upon consultation with theCouncil of State, may refer a bill to theSupreme Court of Ireland to test its constitutionality. If the Court finds that the bill is inconsistent with the Constitution, the president may not sign the bill.

In addition to its legislative role, it is the Dáil that approves the nomination theTaoiseach for appointment by thePresident. The Dáil may also pass amotion of no confidence in theGovernment, in which case theTaoiseach must either seek aparliamentary dissolution or resign. It has happened only once that the loss of confidence of the Dáil did not result in a general election: in 1994John Bruton ofFine Gael becameTaoiseach when theLabour Party left theFianna Fáil coalition government led byAlbert Reynolds.

The Dáil has exclusive power to:

  • Nominate theTaoiseach for appointment by the president;
  • Approve the Taoiseach's nomineesen bloc to serve asGovernment ministers on their appointment by the president;
  • Approve the budget;
  • Initiate bills toamend the Constitution;
  • Ratify treaties which include financial provisions (Provided they do not conflict with the Constitution of Ireland);
  • Approve a declaration of war;
  • Initiate 'money bills' or bills which incur a charge on the public finances (on the recommendation of the Government only);
  • Nominate theComptroller and Auditor General

Activities

[edit]

Leinster House in Dublin, seat of Dáil Éireann.

The Dáil determines its ownstanding orders and its members are protected by certain rights arising fromparliamentary privilege. In line with other modern parliamentary systems, TDs do not generally vote in accordance with their consciences or the wishes of their constituents, but must follow the instructions ofparty whips, a practice that originated in theIrish Parliamentary Party. Except in exceptional circumstances, the Dáil meets in public. The Dáil currently has threestanding committees and thirteenselect committees.

As of 2019, the Dáil sits on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays when the Oireachtas is sitting. On Tuesdays the Dáil normally sits from 2pm until 11pm, on Wednesdays from 9.12am until around 11.30pm and on Thursdays from 9am until around 8pm[citation needed].

A typical day consists of questions to various cabinet ministers, Leaders’ questions whereby opposition Leaders ask the Taoiseach questions and routine debates on Bills. Every Tuesday and Wednesday three hours over the two days are given to the debate of opposition motions. These normally try to embarrass the government and are widely covered in the media. The government and its majority normally amends these suitably and the amended version is passed by the Government.

Debate and speeches are generally in English, but TDs may switch between Irish and English.

Standards of conduct

[edit]

TheCeann Comhairle has ruled that it is disorderly for one deputy to describe another as a brat,buffoon, chancer, communist, corner boy, coward, fascist,gurrier,guttersnipe,hypocrite, rat, scumbag, scurrilous speaker oryahoo; or to insinuate that a TD is lying or drunk; or has violated the secrets of cabinet, or doctored an official report.[22] Also, the reference to "handbagging", particularly with reference to a female member of the House, has been deemed to be unparliamentary.[23]The Dáil maintains a document,Salient Rulings of the Chair which covers behaviour in and out of the House by TDs; section 428 of this lists unparliamentary speech.[24]

Committees

[edit]
Main article:Committees of the Oireachtas

There are 35 Committees as of 30 July 2025. Most Committees have both a "Select Committee" and a corresponding joint committee with the same responsibilities.[25]

Standing committees

[edit]
  • Business Committee (Also acts as the Dáil Committee of Selection)
  • Committee on Budgetary Oversight
  • Committee on Consolidation Bills
  • Committee on Members' Interests of Dáil Éireann
  • Committee on Parliamentary Privileges and Oversight
  • Committee on Standing Orders and Dáil Reform
  • Committee of Public Accounts
  • Working Group of Committee Cathaoirligh
  • Committee on Members Interests (Seanad Éireann)
  • Committee of Selection (Seanad Éireann)
  • Committee on Parliamentary Privileges and Oversight (Seanad Éireann)

Joint/Select committees

[edit]
  • Committee on Agriculture and Food
  • Joint Committee on Artificial Intelligence
  • Committee on Arts, Media, Communication, Culture and Sport
  • Committee on Children and Equality
  • Committee on Climate, Environment and Energ
  • Committee on Defence and National Security
  • Committee on Disability Matters
  • Joint Committee on Drugs Use
  • Committee on Education and Youth
  • Committee on Tourism, Enterprise and Employment
  • Committee on European Union Affairs
  • Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure, Public Service Reform and Digitalisation and Taoiseach
  • Committee on Fishiries and Maritime Affairs
  • Committee on Foreign Affairs and Trade
  • Committee on Further and Higher Education, Research, Innovation and Science
  • Committee on Health
  • Committee on Housing, Local Government and Heritage
  • Committee on Infrastructure and National Development Plan Delivery
  • Committee on Justice, Home Affairs and Migration
  • Joint Committee on Key Issues Affecting the Traveller Community
  • Joint Committee on Public Petitions and the Ombudsmen
  • Committee on Social Protection, Rural and Community Development
  • Joint Committee on the Implementation of the Good Friday Agreement
  • Committee on the Irish Language, Gaeltacht and the Irish-speaking Community
  • Committee on Transport

Voting procedure

[edit]

The Ceann Comhairle (or Leas-Cheann Comhairle) first puts the question in Irish, asking the TDs present to say (Yes) orNíl (No) if they agree or disagree with the question before them. The Ceann Comhairle then gives their opinion as to the outcome of the voice vote. Deputies can challenge the Ceann Comhairle and demand a recorded vote by shoutingVótáil! (Vote!) The Ceann Comhairle then shoutsVótáil! again which starts the voting process. Division bells sound around Leinster House and in some of its adjoining buildings calling deputies to the chamber to vote. The bells ring for six minutes and the doors to the chamber are locked after a further four minutes.

The Ceann Comhairle then appoints two tellers for each side and deputies are given one minute to vote. The vote is taken by electronic means whereby Deputies press either the Tá or Níl button on their desks to vote for or against a motion. After the voting time has concluded a sheet (Division Paper) containing the result and each TDs vote is signed by the four tellers and given to the Ceann Comhairle who declares the result.

While electronic voting has become the norm the Dáil votes manually through the lobbies at the back of the chamber on a number of occasions, for example, motions of no confidence. A teller in an electronic vote can call a manual vote if they so wish. This has become an opposition tactic during important votes which are widely covered in the media.

History

[edit]

Precursors

[edit]

The first legislature to exist in Ireland was theParliament of Ireland from 1297 to 1800, and its house of representatives was theHouse of Commons. However the Parliament of Ireland was abolished under theAct of Union of 1800, with MPs elected for Ireland sitting in theHouse of Commons of the United Kingdom until 1922. Irish nationalists first convened Dáil Éireann as a revolutionary parliament in 1919 and while it successfully took over most functions of government it was not recognised underUnited Kingdom law.

In 1921 the United Kingdom government established a legislature called theParliament of Southern Ireland in an effort to appease nationalists by granting Ireland limitedhome rule. However this body was rejected and boycotted by nationalists whose allegiance remained with the Dáil. Nonetheless, because the First Dáil was illegal under the United Kingdom constitution, the lower house of the Parliament of Southern Ireland, theHouse of Commons of Southern Ireland, is considered in British legal theory as the precursor to the Dáil.

Revolutionary Dáil (1919–1922)

[edit]
Main article:Dáil Éireann (Irish Republic)
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The current Dáil derives from the 1937 Constitution of Ireland, but a continuity from theFirst Dáil of 1919 is considered to exist. That Dáil was an assembly established bySinn FéinMPs elected to theHouse of Commons of the United Kingdom in the1918 United Kingdom general election. They had contested the election on amanifesto commitment of "[establishing] a constituent assembly comprising persons chosen by Irish constituencies as the supreme national authority to speak and act in the name of the Irish people". Upon winning 73 of the 105 Irish seats in the election, Sinn Féin MPs refused to recognise theUnited Kingdom parliament and instead convened as Dáil Éireann (translated as "Assembly of Ireland"): the unicameral legislature of a unilaterally declaredIrish Republic, and the first Irish parliament to exist since 1801. The Dáil of the Irish Republic, however, was only recognised internationally by theRussian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic. The first meeting of the Dáil occurred in Dublin on 21 January 1919, in theMansion House, attended by27 members. The body was prohibited in the following September, and was forced underground, meeting in several locations thereafter.

Irish Free State (1922–1937)

[edit]
Main article:Dáil Éireann (Irish Free State)
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The Dáil of the Irish Republic was succeeded on 6 December 1922 by the Dáil of theIrish Free State. The Irish Free State, comprising the twenty-six southern and western counties of Ireland, was established under the 1921Anglo-Irish Treaty. Dáil Éireann was the house of representatives, described in the new constitution as a "Chamber of Deputies, of a bicameral legislature called theOireachtas of the Irish Free State." The first Dáil to exist under theConstitution of the Irish Free State succeeded theSecond Dáil of the Irish Republic and so was styled theThird Dáil. The Third Dáil, and every subsequent Dáil, has met in Leinster House.

Constitution of Ireland (since 1937)

[edit]

TheConstitution of Ireland, adopted in 1937, established the modern Irish state, referred to as Ireland.[20] Under the constitution a new legislature retained the titleOireachtas, and its lower house remainedDáil Éireann. The first Dáil to meet under the Constitution of Ireland was described as the Ninth Dáil.

During theCOVID-19 pandemic and the necessity forsocial distancing, the Dáil temporarily sat at theConvention Centre Dublin from June 2020 to July 2021.[26] From September 2021, the Dáil returned to sitting in Leinster House.


Historical composition

[edit]

Irish Republic (1916/1919–1922)

[edit]
  Lab
  SF
  Lab U
  IPP
  Others
  Ind
  FP
  Ind. U
Total seats
1918
7336122
105
1921
1244
128
1922
173658197
128

Irish Free State (1922–1937)

[edit]
  Lab
  SF /Rep
  FF
  Others
  Ind
  CnG
  FG
  FP
  NCP
  NLP
Total seats
1923
14444136315
153
Jun 1927
225441647118
153
Sep 1927
13571126262
153
1932
77214573
153
1933
87794811
153
1937
1369848
138

Republic of Ireland (since 1937)

[edit]
  WP
  SP
  PBP
  I4C
  DL
  SF
  SD
  GP
  Lab
  NL
  CnP
  CnT
  FF
  Others
  Ind
  PD
  FG
  II
  Aon
Total seats
1938
977745
138
1943
17106711132
138
1944
8497611030
138
1948
1451076811131
147
1951
1626691440
147
1954
193565550
147
1957
4121378940
147
1961
1612702647
144
1965
22172247
144
1969
1875150
144
1973
1969254
144
1977
1784443
148
1981
115783465
166
Feb 1982
31581463
166
Nov 1982
21675370
166
1987
41281131451
166
1989
71157714655
166
1992
41336851045
166
1997
141217776454
166
2002
156218113831
166
2007
4620785251
166
2011
2214372011476
166
2016
6423327194450
158
2020
513761261938351
160
2024
33911111116483842
174

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Horgan-Jones, Jack (14 February 2025)."Just how big is the Government's majority? TDs from Lowry group muddy the waters".Irish Times. Retrieved14 February 2025.
  2. ^"Salaries". Houses of the Oireachtas. 1 June 2024. Retrieved18 June 2024.
  3. ^"Parliamentary Standard Allowance". Houses of the Oireachtas. 19 November 2019. Retrieved26 February 2024.
  4. ^"Dáil Éireann".Collins Dictionary.Archived from the original on 19 May 2024. Retrieved19 May 2024.
  5. ^abArticle 15.1.2° of theConstitution of Ireland reads: "The Oireachtas shall consist of the President and two Houses, viz.: a House of Representatives to be called Dáil Éireann and a Senate to be called Seanad Éireann."
  6. ^Electoral (Amendment) Act 2023, s. 2: Number of members of Dáil Éireann (No. 40 of 2023, s. 2). Enacted on 19 December 2023. Act of theOireachtas. Retrieved fromIrish Statute Book.
  7. ^Electoral Act 1992, s. 41: Disqualification for membership of Dáil (No. 23 of 1992, s. 41). Enacted on 5 November 1992. Act of theOireachtas. Retrieved fromIrish Statute Book on 5 August 2021.
  8. ^Citizens information."Right to vote in Ireland".www.citizensinformation.ie.Archived from the original on 27 May 2017. Retrieved5 May 2017.
  9. ^abElectoral Act 1992, s. 33: Maximum duration of Dáil (No. 23 of 1992, s. 33). Enacted on 5 November 1992. Act of theOireachtas. Retrieved fromIrish Statute Book on 5 August 2021.
  10. ^Electoral Act 1997, s. 6: Function of Constituency Commission (No. 25 of 1997, s. 6). Enacted on 15 May 1997. Act of theOireachtas. Retrieved fromIrish Statute Book on 5 August 2021.
  11. ^Constituency Review Report 2023(PDF) (Report). Electoral Commission. 30 August 2023.
  12. ^Constitution (Amendment No. 4) Act 1927, s. 1: Extension of duration of Dáil Eireann (No. 5 of 1927, s. 1). Enacted on 4 March 1927. Act of theOireachtas. Retrieved fromIrish Statute Book on 5 August 2021.
  13. ^Electoral (Amendment) Act 1927, s. 7: Maximum duration of the Oireachtas (No. 21 of 1927, s. 7). Enacted on 22 May 1927. Act of theOireachtas. Retrieved fromIrish Statute Book on 28 March 2020.
  14. ^Electoral Act 1992, s. 39: Issue and return of writs (No. 23 of 1992, s. 39). Enacted on 5 November 1992. Act of theOireachtas. Retrieved fromIrish Statute Book on 5 August 2021.
  15. ^Electoral Act 1992, s. 96: Times of poll (No. 23 of 1992, s. 96). Enacted on 5 November 1992. Act of theOireachtas. Retrieved fromIrish Statute Book on 5 August 2021.
  16. ^Electoral (Amendment) Act 2001, s. 23: Amendment of section 96 of Principal Act. (No. 38 of 2001, s. 23). Enacted on 24 October 2001. Act of theOireachtas. Retrieved fromIrish Statute Book on 31 October 2024.
  17. ^Electoral Act 1992, s. 2: Interpretation (No. 23 of 1992, s. 2). Enacted on 5 November 1992. Act of theOireachtas. Retrieved fromIrish Statute Book on 5 August 2021.
  18. ^The Statesman's Year-BookArchived 29 July 2020 at theWayback Machine, 1930, page 77
  19. ^Connolly, S. J., ed. (2004).The Oxford Companion to Irish History (2nd pbk ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 141.ISBN 9780192805010.
  20. ^ab"Constitution of Ireland". Office of the Attorney General.Archived from the original on 3 May 2019. Retrieved9 November 2011.
  21. ^"Irish Grammar Database: dáil".www.teanglann.ie.Archived from the original on 27 September 2015. Retrieved26 September 2015.
  22. ^Salient Rulings of the Chair (2nd ed.). Dublin: Dáil Éireann. May 2002. §408.
  23. ^"Dáil code: 'handbagging' not allowed".The Irish Times. 12 December 2009.Archived from the original on 25 October 2010. Retrieved13 December 2009.
  24. ^"Personal Apology by Deputy".Houses of the Oireachtas. 11 December 2009.Archived from the original on 9 November 2019. Retrieved9 November 2019.
  25. ^Oireachtas, Houses of the (22 July 2025)."Oireachtas committees – Houses of the Oireachtas".www.oireachtas.ie. Retrieved30 July 2025.
  26. ^Hosford, Paul (15 July 2021)."Dáil back in Leinster House on Sept 15 after summer break".Irish Examiner. Retrieved16 July 2022.

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