The general election that followed the ‘earthquake’ of 25 February 2011 (Gallagher and Marsh 2011; Hutcheson 2011; Little 2011) was always going to be an important staging post on the journey from the Fianna Fáil party’s predominance towards some new dispensation. That election took place five years and one day later. It delivered the most fragmented Dáil (lower house of parliament) ever and was followed by Ireland’s longest government formation process. Fine Gael’s Enda Kenny succeeded in becoming the first leader of his party since the 1920s to retain the office of Taoiseach (Prime Minister) after a general election. He achieved this by negotiating a minority coalition with several non-party (‘Independent’) TDs (MPs) and a ‘confidence an...
peer-reviewedMany commentators have sounded the death knell for party identification. For example, D...
For the first time, unionist parties do not hold an overall majority in Northern Ireland following t...
On Friday 11 March 2005 voting for the Meath and Kildare North by‐elections took place between 7.00a...
peer-reviewedThe general election that followed the ‘earthquake’ of 25 February 2011 (Gallagher and ...
Ireland is expected to hold its next general election in either February or March. Ahead of the elec...
The 2011 Irish general election is generally regarded as an ‘earthquake election’, with the governin...
Irish voters go to the polls today in the country’s general election. Ahead of the vote, Adrian Kava...
peer-reviewedThe full text of this article will not be available in ULIR until the embargo expires o...
© 2016 Political Studies Association of Ireland. As voters across Northern Ireland went to the polls...
The 2020 Irish general election result was widely characterised as both a ‘shock’ and as a victory f...
The three-party coalition government formed in 2007 between Fianna Fail, the Green Party and the Pro...
The 2016 elections to the Northern Irish Assembly were the fifth since its creation in 1998 as part ...
This chapter investigates the role of the Irish parliament in government formation, a two-stage proc...
This chapter focuses on party switching. The civil-war cleavage that differentiated the two main Iri...
International audienceThe 2016 elections to the Northern Irish Assembly were the fifth since its cre...
peer-reviewedMany commentators have sounded the death knell for party identification. For example, D...
For the first time, unionist parties do not hold an overall majority in Northern Ireland following t...
On Friday 11 March 2005 voting for the Meath and Kildare North by‐elections took place between 7.00a...
peer-reviewedThe general election that followed the ‘earthquake’ of 25 February 2011 (Gallagher and ...
Ireland is expected to hold its next general election in either February or March. Ahead of the elec...
The 2011 Irish general election is generally regarded as an ‘earthquake election’, with the governin...
Irish voters go to the polls today in the country’s general election. Ahead of the vote, Adrian Kava...
peer-reviewedThe full text of this article will not be available in ULIR until the embargo expires o...
© 2016 Political Studies Association of Ireland. As voters across Northern Ireland went to the polls...
The 2020 Irish general election result was widely characterised as both a ‘shock’ and as a victory f...
The three-party coalition government formed in 2007 between Fianna Fail, the Green Party and the Pro...
The 2016 elections to the Northern Irish Assembly were the fifth since its creation in 1998 as part ...
This chapter investigates the role of the Irish parliament in government formation, a two-stage proc...
This chapter focuses on party switching. The civil-war cleavage that differentiated the two main Iri...
International audienceThe 2016 elections to the Northern Irish Assembly were the fifth since its cre...
peer-reviewedMany commentators have sounded the death knell for party identification. For example, D...
For the first time, unionist parties do not hold an overall majority in Northern Ireland following t...
On Friday 11 March 2005 voting for the Meath and Kildare North by‐elections took place between 7.00a...