Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Units 4.9 to 4.12 summary
- The executive takes
power
- On the first of January the power sharing
executive and assembly took power but
before long the future of power sharing
looked bleak
- On the fourth of January the ruling committee of
the UUP voted to reject the Sunningdale
Agreement
- In response Brian
Faulkner resigned as
leader and was replaced
by Harry West
- This was because of the
so-called 'Irish Dimension'
- 19 of 21 Ulster Unionist Assembly
members still supported Faulkner
and so he stayed on as chief
executive
- Although, it was clear he was isolated within unionism
- At the end of February 1974 a General
Election for the Westminster Parliament was
held
- All but one of the seats won in NI were UUUC MPs
who opposed power sharing, the Sunningdale
Agreement and Faulkner
- The result showed that most
people in NI opposed the
agreement
- The UUC portrayed the General
election as a referendum on the
Sunningdale Agreement
- More impacts of the 1974 General Election
- A new Labour Government in London
- The election led to a change
of government in London
with the Conservatives
losing to the labour Party
- Edward heath was replaced as PM by Harold
Wilson
- Merlyn Rees became the new secretary of state
- He was then forced to spend a lot of his time
in London and didn't spend enough time
trying to keep power sharing up and running
in NI
- These political developments took place at the same time as
the violence continued and the 100th victim of the troubles
was killed on April 1974 (James May)
- As well as this, regular unionist protests continued
against the Sunningdale Agreement
- The British government insisted there was no alternative
- The Ulster Worker's Strike
- The Background and Aim
- On the 14th of may
1974, a debate was held
in the NI Assembly on
power sharing and the
Council of Ireland
- Defeated by 44 votes to 28
- Shortly after, Harry Murray who was the Harland and Wolff shop
steward and Ulster Workers Council organiser told journalists that a
general strike would begin the day after
- The UWC was a group of Protestant Trade
Unionists who had gained a lot of political
and paramilitary support
- Their aim was to show 'grassroots' unionist
opposition to the Sunningdale Agreement
- The Strike
- At first, support for the strike was limited but intimidation by
the UDA and better coordination by the UWC meant that by
the end of the first week, NI came to a standstill which lasted
14 days
- Attempts were made by some trade
unionists to organise back-to-work
demonstartions but these got little
support
- The country was brought to a standstill for 14 days
- The British Government's response to the UWC strike
- The army
- Although there were 17500 soldiers stationed in
NI, they were wary of taking action as they
though the strike was a political not terrorist
action
- The British PM
- Harold Wilson ran out of patience with
the situation and went on Tv on the 25th
of may to denounce the strike and called
the organisers 'spongers'
- this was interpreted by unionists as an
attack on them and galvanised support
for the strike and wore a sponge to
show their support the following
morning
- Dublin and Monaghan bombings (17th may 1974)
- car bombs believed to have been planted
by loyalists exploded killing 33 and
wounding 300 more
- The Re-introduction of Direct Rule
- Although the government was not
prepared to use the army to break the
strike, it did order it to take over
twenty petrol stations
- In response the UWC ordered a total
shutdown across NI and that at midnight
Ballylumford power station would be
closed as the workers joined the strike
- Faulkner resigned as Chief Executive on
the 28th of may as the SDLP were
refusing to negotiate and there were no
other obvious solutions
- The other unionist members then
resigned thus ending power
sharing
- Having achieved its goal of
showing its opposition to power
sharing, the UWC called off the
strike on the 29th of may 1974
- The assembly was suspended on the 30th of may and
direct rule was re introduced