Charles
Stewart Parnell (1846 – 1891) was an Irish political leader and one of the
most important figures in 19th century Ireland and the United Kingdom; William
Ewart Gladstone (Prime Minister: 1868-1874, 1880-1885, 1886 and 1892-1894)
described him as the most remarkable person he had ever met: "I do not say
the ablest man; I say the most remarkable and the most interesting. He was an
intellectual phenomenon." Though generally called the "uncrowned king of
Ireland", Parnell was in fact the second to be described as such. The same term
was applied thirty years earlier to Daniel O'Connell. Parnell is regarded as one
of the most extraordinary figures in Irish and British politics. He
single-handedly invented the modern political party with its
whip, while having the power to make and unmake
governments in the United Kingdom.
Parnell fundamentally changed the Home Rule League.
Previously a rather informal grouping, in which MPs regularly voted on different
issues or never bothered to come to the House of Commons at all, Parnell
restructured it from top to bottom, creating a well-organised grass roots
structure and membership. In 1882 he changed its name to the Irish Parliamentary
Party and in 1884 imposed a strict party oath obliging its MPs to
vote en bloc. The creation of a strict party
whip and formal party structure was unique in
politics. The Irish Parliamentary Party is generally seen as the first modern
British political party, with its efficient structures and control contrasting
with the loose rules and informality found in the main British parties. The
scale of Parnell's impact can be seen in the fact that parties from Fianna Fáil
and Fine Gael have tried to claim him as "one of their own", as more recently
have some in Sinn Féin.
vote en bloc |
pártfegyelem mentén történő szavazás |
credits:
1. The text was extracted from Wikipedia The Free Encyclopedia under GNU Free Documentation Licence.