Jump to content

1959 Irish presidential election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Iveagh Gardens (talk | contribs) at 20:13, 11 April 2020 (removed two adjacent links to same page). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

1959 Irish presidential election

← 1952 17 June 1959 1966 →
Turnout58.3%
 
Nominee Éamon de Valera Seán Mac Eoin
Party Fianna Fáil Fine Gael
Popular vote 538,003 417,536
Final percentage 56.3% 43.7%

President before election

Seán T. O'Kelly
Fianna Fáil

Elected President

Éamon de Valera
Fianna Fáil

The 1959 Irish presidential election was held on 17 June 1959. Éamon de Valera, then Taoiseach, was elected as president of Ireland. A referendum proposed by de Valera to replace the electoral system of proportional representation by means of the single transferable vote with first-past-the-post voting which was held on the same day was defeated by 48.2% to 52.8%.

Nomination process

Under Article 12 of the Constitution of Ireland, a candidate for president may be nominated by:

Outgoing president Seán T. O'Kelly had served two terms, and was ineligible to serve again. On 27 April, the Minister for Local Government signed the ministerial order opening nominations, with noon on 19 May as the deadline for nominations, and 17 June set as the date for a contest.[1] All Irish citizens on the Dáil electoral register were eligible to vote.

Éamon de Valera who had served as President of Dáil Éireann and President of the Irish Republic from 1919 to 1922 during the Irish revolutionary period, as President of the Executive Council from 1932 to 1937, and as Taoiseach from 1937 to 1948, from 1951 to 1954, and again from 1957 until his election as president, was nominated by Fianna Fáil on 12 May.[2] He had served as Fianna Fáil's leader since its foundation in 1926.

Seán Mac Eoin, a Fine Gael TD who had been the party's candidate in the 1945 presidential election, was nominated again by the party on 15 May.[3]

Patrick McCartan, who had also been a candidate in the 1945 election and had served as a senator for Clann na Poblachta from 1948 to 1951, was nominated by two county councils only, short of the four required for nomination.[4][5] Eoin O'Mahony also sought and failed to secure a nomination by county councils.[6]

Éamon de Valera was inaugurated as president on 25 June.

Result

1959 Irish presidential election[7]
Candidate Nominated by % 1st Pref Count 1
Éamon de Valera Oireachtas: Fianna Fáil 56.3 538,003
Seán Mac Eoin Oireachtas: Fine Gael 43.7 417,536
Electorate: 1,678,450   Valid: 955,539   Spoilt: 24,089 (2.5%)   Quota: 477,770   Turnout: 58.3%
Popular vote
De Valera
56.3%
Mac Eoin
43.7%
Results by constituency
Constituency De Valera Mac Eoin
Votes % Votes %
Carlow–Kilkenny bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|20,023 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|58.0 14,521 42.0
Cavan bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|13,912 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|56.6 10,669 43.4
Clare bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|19,095 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|65.0 10,270 35.0
Cork Borough bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|19,390 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|55.8 15,340 44.2
Cork East bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|12,117 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|56.6 9,295 43.4
Cork North bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|12,754 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|54.2 10,793 45.8
Cork South bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|11,909 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|53.5 10,367 46.5
Cork West 10,235 48.5 bgcolor="Template:Fine Gael/meta/color"|10,861 bgcolor="Template:Fine Gael/meta/color"|51.5
Donegal East bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|15,521 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|69.1 6,934 30.9
Donegal West bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|9,616 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|62.8 5,700 37.2
Dublin County bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|19,449 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|52.9 17,292 47.1
Dublin North-East 6,133 47.9 bgcolor="Template:Fine Gael/meta/color"|6,682 bgcolor="Template:Fine Gael/meta/color"|52.1
Dublin North-Central 16,417 48.5 bgcolor="Template:Fine Gael/meta/color"|17,446 bgcolor="Template:Fine Gael/meta/color"|51.5
Dublin North-West 7,707 46.3 bgcolor="Template:Fine Gael/meta/color"|8,941 bgcolor="Template:Fine Gael/meta/color"|53.7
Dublin South-Central 11,819 49.6 bgcolor="Template:Fine Gael/meta/color"|12,010 bgcolor="Template:Fine Gael/meta/color"|50.4
Dublin South-East bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|10,363 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|50.8 10,034 49.2
Dublin South-West bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|16,195 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|51.0 15,551 49.0
Dún Laoghaire and Rathdown bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|16,911 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|53.0 14,982 47.0
Galway North bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|9,037 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|62.7 5,368 37.3
Galway South bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|11,710 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|66.6 5,868 33.4
Galway West bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|10,134 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|69.0 4,548 31.0
Kerry North bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|12,361 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|61.7 7,680 38.3
Kerry South bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|7,472 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|57.7 5,481 42.3
Kildare bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|10,794 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|52.4 9,791 47.6
Laois–Offaly bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|20,059 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|58.8 14,045 41.2
Limerick East bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|15,942 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|59.2 11,007 40.8
Limerick West bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|12,918 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|62.4 7,799 37.6
Longford–Westmeath 16,234 48.1 bgcolor="Template:Fine Gael/meta/color"|17,534 bgcolor="Template:Fine Gael/meta/color"|51.9
Louth bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|13,646 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|55.2 11,076 44.8
Mayo North bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|9,219 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|62.0 5,651 38.0
Mayo South bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|12,925 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|55.1 10,538 44.9
Meath bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|13,940 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|58.9 9,710 41.1
Monaghan bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|11,028 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|60.0 7,361 40.0
Roscommon bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|12,188 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|53.5 10,599 46.5
Sligo–Leitrim bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|16,081 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|52.7 14,449 47.3
Tipperary North bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|12,253 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|60.2 8,104 39.8
Tipperary South bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|16,568 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|58.2 11,900 41.8
Waterford bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|15,679 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|61.7 9,715 38.3
Wexford bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|17,290 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|55.9 13,667 44.1
Wicklow bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|10,959 bgcolor="Template:Fianna Fáil/meta/color"|57.9 7,957 42.1
Total 538,003 56.3 417,536 43.7

References

  1. ^ "Presidential election on June 17th". The Irish Times. 28 April 1959.
  2. ^ "Papers presented". The Irish Times. 16 May 1959.
  3. ^ "MacEoin nomination goes in today". The Irish Times. 15 May 1959.
  4. ^ "Council to nominate MacCartan". The Irish Times. 12 May 1959.
  5. ^ "Only two to stand for Presidency". The Irish Times. 20 May 1959.
  6. ^ "No Cork candidate for president". The Irish Times. 13 May 1959.
  7. ^ "Presidential Elections 1938–2011" (PDF). Department of the Environment, Community and Local Government. p. 24. Retrieved 16 August 2018.