Jason Knirck
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A slightly constitutional opposition
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The creation of Fianna Fáil in 1926 and its decision to enter the Dáil in 1927 are often seen as a massive change in Irish politics and the consolidation of Irish democracy. While having nearly all political opinion represented in the Dáil did matter, the normalisation of opposition did not take place in 1927. The smaller parties saw their dreams of forming a government fail in the summer of 1927, and the two large nationalist parties continued to stump for the recreation of a single national party that would dominate politics. Fianna Fáil also co-opted many of the issues that had animated the smaller parties and left them less room to operate ideologically.

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Democracy and dissent in the Irish Free State

Opposition, decolonisation, and majority rights

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