Privy Council (Northern Ireland)
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The Privy Council of Northern Ireland is a formal body of advisors to the sovereign and was a vehicle for the monarch's prerogative powers in Northern Ireland. It was modelled on the Privy Council of the United Kingdom.
The Council was created in 1922 as a result of the division of Ireland into the Irish Free State and Northern Ireland. The latter remained part of the United Kingdom albeit with its own parliament. The previous Privy Council of Ireland was obsolete although never formally abolished in British law.
The Privy Council of Northern Ireland consisted of senior members of the Northern Ireland government including the Prime Minister of Northern Ireland; its members were appointed for life. The Council rarely met and was largely a ceremonial body with its responsibilities exercised by the cabinet. It was effectively abolished when the office of Governor of Northern Ireland and the Parliament of Northern Ireland were formally abolished in 1973[1] and its powers were transferred to the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, a member of the British Cabinet.
Members are entitled to use the prefix The Right Honourable, whilst peers who are members use the post-nominal letters PC (NI). Four members are still living as of May 2014.
Notable Members
- Sir James Craig
- John Miller Andrews
- Sir Basil Brooke
- Terence O'Neill, Baron O'Neill of the Maine
- James Chichester-Clark
- Brian Faulkner
- Hugh MacDowell Pollock
- John Milne Barbour
- John Maynard Sinclair
- Brian Maginess
- George Boyle Hanna
- Jack Andrews
- Ivan Neill
- Herbert Kirk
- Anthony Babington
- Richard Best
- Edward Sullivan Murphy
- Arthur Black
- John MacDermott, Baron MacDermott
- William Lowry
- Lancelot Curran
- Edmond Warnock
- Brian Maginess
- Edward Warburton Jones
- Basil Kelly
- Peter Rawlinson, Baron Rawlinson of Ewell
Footnotes
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