The City Hall, Dublin, originally the Royal Exchange, was built between
1769 and 1779 to the designs of architect Thomas Cooley (architect) and
is a particularly fine example of 18th century architecture. Located at
the top of Parliament Street on the city's southside, it stands next to
Dublin Castle, the location of British government in Ireland until 1922.
City government had originally been located in the mediæval Tholstel one
quarter of a mile away. In the 1850s, the City Corporation bought the
Royal Exchange and converted it for use by city government. The building
was restored to its eighteenth century appearance at the beginning of
the twenty-first century.
Most Dublin City Council staff are located in the new and controversial
Civic Offices, built on the site of a national monument, the Viking city
foundations on Wood Quay. Dublin Corporation itself was renamed in the
early 2000s' as Dublin City Council. Council meetings take place in City
Hall.
Local government in Ireland British with a distinct Irish accent Andrew Stevens
30 December 2006: Local government in the Republic of Ireland predates
its national political structures, with much of the constitutional
arrangements laid down under British rule in the late nineteenth century
remaining in place. Ireland’s local government arrangements consist of
29 county councils with a set of smaller town and in some cases borough
councils at the sub-tier. Irish councils serve 4.1m people and have lost
many of their powers to centralising instincts on the part of national
government.
Both the Republic of Ireland and the Island of Ireland itself
(including the British-governed province of Ulster) are considered to be
geographically part of the British Isles but this has more currency in
considering Europe’s geographical make-up than in political terms, for a
variety of reasons. Among those in the Republic who resent the term
‘British’ the neutral term is ‘Islands of the North Atlantic’, though
this has yet to gain widespread acceptance.
The history between Ireland and its neighbour in the form of the
United Kingdom has been characterised by a number of invasions and wars,
with legal incorporation beginning in 1801 with the Act of Union and
ending in 1920 with the Government of Ireland Act, which saw the 26
counties of the Catholic south secede from the United Kingdom to leave
the six counties of the Protestant north in place. Within the Island of
Ireland itself, 4.1m are resident in the Republic and 1.7m live in the
United Kingdom province of Ulster. Since the peace process brokered in
the late 1990s, a number of North-South political institutions have been
created and laws exist to accord political rights north and south of the
border to all citizens of the island.
Ireland makes much of its Christian heritage and the role of
religion is central to many people’s lives throughout the country. In
the 1990s, after decades of a sluggish economy, Ireland enjoyed an
unparalleled economic boom and rebranded itself as a ‘Celtic Tiger’.
Tourism plays a major role in the national economy, both rural and in
the capital Dublin while agriculture plays an important role. Ireland
also enjoys a vibrant cultural life and heritage.
The Island of Ireland is divided into four traditional provinces,
Connacht, Leinster, Munster and Ulster. These are further divided into
32 historic counties throughout the island, with six remaining north of
the border in Northern Ireland (UK). Six counties of the nine counties
of Ulster are in Northern Ireland, with three remaining in the Republic,
thus rendering the term Ulster politically inaccurate if used to denote
political boundaries. The four provinces have no administrative
structure, either in the Republic or Northern Ireland. In the Republic
the 26 counties are reflected in administrative counties, except in
Tipperary and Dublin, which both have subdivisions. In Northern Ireland
the six counties are defunct in local government terms, with 26 district
councils existing in the province, though the six counties are used for
some civil service functions under the direction of its political
institutions.
Dublin has long served as the Irish capital since the island was
divided into tribal kingdoms. The city of Dublin has a population of
495,000, though the metropolitan area including surrounding counties is
estimated at 1.6m. Dublin City Council (known as the Dublin Corporation
until 2002) is presided over by the Lord Mayor of Dublin, a ceremonial
post appointed to from among the city’s 52 assembly members. Executive
power is vested in an appointed city manager, who oversees a staff of
6,000 city officials and employees. In 2002 the Irish Parliament passed
legislation to make the mayoralty directly elected but this was later
repealed before it could take effect. The city is twinned with
Barcelona, Liverpool and San Jose, California.
Outside of Dublin, a varied pattern of local government exists.
Local government in the Republic owes its genesis to the Local
Government (Ireland) Act of 1898, which was actually passed by the
United Kingdom’s Parliament at Westminster with the aim of reforming
Irish councils along the lines of those recently created on the
mainland. This ushered in a two-tier system for most of the island, with
all-purpose county boroughs in large urban centres. Subsequent
legislation passed by the Irish Parliament has amended this Act but it
remains in force today, in addition to the recognition of local
government’s status in the Constitution of Ireland, as amended in 1999.
Instead of the 26 historic counties of the south, local
government in the Republic is subdivided into 29 administrative
counties, with 24 of the historic counties being reflected by an elected
county council. Dublin is further divided into three counties while
Tipperary is divided into North and South. There are five cities in the
Republic, each with their own city council, Dublin, Cork, Galway,
Limerick and Waterford. The five city councils are considered as having
the same power and status as the counties. The sub-tier is generally
known as town councils, though five (including the city of Kilkenny)
style themselves borough councils. Local government in Ireland has seen
a steady erosion of its powers since 1945, with a number of functions
passing to central government-appointed boards. Like the city manager in
Dublin, each council has an official manager, who carries out many tasks
ordinarily reserved for political leaders elsewhere in European local
government.
Though the pattern of local authorities in Ireland is complex and
uneven, the role of local government itself corresponds to a general
model of local administration, with locally-elected councils working
within a policy framework determined by the centre. Therefore the
elected element merely provides for minor local variance to such
policies and the cover of local democracy within a highly centralised
system. Principally, Irish local authorities exercise limited
jurisdiction over education, health, housing, roads, water supply
services, sewerage and waste, local economic development, planning,
environmental protection, culture and sport and agriculture. A review of
local government in Ireland commissioned by central government and
reporting in 2006, recommended some fiscal reforms to allow for local
revenue raising and more autonomy in local service provision, but this
was ultimately rejected by central government.
Local government in Ireland is overseen by the Minister for
Environment, Heritage and Local Government, with civil service
responsibility residing with the Department of Environment, Heritage and
Local Government. The minister between 1997 and 2002, Noel Dempsey of
Fianna Fail, was seen as a reforming minister and oversaw substantial
changes, including constitutional recognition of local councils and the
introduction of public service reforms. All councils are elected to by
proportional representation and councillors generally belong to one of
the Republic’s main political parties. Most political parties in
Ireland, north and south, owe their origins to either the Irish civil
war or sectarian religious considerations. For instance, Fianna Fail and
Fine Gael represented different sides in the civil war of 1922-23.
Catholic-led Sinn Fein, which aims for a united Ireland, organises
throughout the 32 counties, while the Democratic Unionist Party does
not.