Jason Knirck
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Making politics normal
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After the civil war ended in 1923, there were widespread expectations that Irish politics would return to a ‘normal’ left–right division and that the prominence of nationalist issues and the Sinn Féin Party would end. There were a number of smaller parties – the Farmers’ Party, the Labour Party, and the National League – that were organised around economic issues and were prepared to take power once politics returned to normal. The two large nationalist parties – the pro- and anti-Treaty wings of Sinn Féin – did not want this kind of normalisation, and continued to promote the need for a single national party and a style of politics that departed from British norms.

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Democracy and dissent in the Irish Free State

Opposition, decolonisation, and majority rights

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