Ards (Northern Ireland Parliament constituency)

Ards was a constituency of the Parliament of Northern Ireland.

Ards
Former County Constituency
for the Parliament of Northern Ireland
Former constituency
Created1929
Abolished1972
Election methodFirst past the post

Boundaries

Ards was a county constituency comprising the town of Newtownards, the Ards peninsula and the town of Donaghadee. It was created in 1929 when the House of Commons (Method of Voting and Redistribution of Seats) Act (Northern Ireland) 1929 introduced first past the post elections throughout Northern Ireland. Ards was created by the division of Down into eight new constituencies. The constituency survived unchanged, returning one member of Parliament until the Parliament of Northern Ireland was temporarily suspended in 1972, and then formally abolished in 1973.[1]

Politics

Ards had a unionist majority, and consistently elected Ulster Unionist Party members. It was sometimes contested by members of the Ulster Liberal Party, Northern Ireland Labour Party or Commonwealth Labour Party, who received between 19% and 42% of the votes cast.[2]

Members of Parliament

Elected Party Name[2]
1929 UUP Henry Mulholland
1945 UUP Robert Perceval-Maxwell
1949 UUP William May
1962 UUP William Long
May died during his time in office and his seat was vacant at dissolution.

Elections

Northern Ireland 1921–1972
This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
Northern Ireland 1921–1972
General Election 1929: Ards[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
UUP Henry Mulholland 8,556 67.2 N/A
NI Labour A. Adams 2,818 22.2 N/A
Ulster Liberal J. Boyd 1,349 10.6 N/A
Majority 5,738 45.0 N/A
Turnout 74.7 N/A
UUP hold Swing N/A

At the 1933 and 1938 general elections, Henry Mulholland was elected unopposed.[2]

General Election 1945: Ards[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
UUP Robert Perceval-Maxwell 7,976 58.7 N/A
Commonwealth Labour Albert McElroy 5,615 41.3 N/A
Majority 2,361 17.4 N/A
Turnout 70.8 N/A
UUP hold Swing N/A

At the 1949 Northern Ireland general election, William May was elected unopposed.[2]

General Election 1953: Ards[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
UUP William May 9,562 70.4 N/A
NI Labour Jack McDowell 4,022 29.6 N/A
Majority 5,540 40.8 N/A
Turnout 60.0 N/A
UUP hold Swing N/A

At the 1958 Northern Ireland general election, William May was elected unopposed.[2]

General Election 1962: Ards[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
UUP William Long 7,501 71.4 N/A
Ulster Liberal Albert McElroy 3,008 28.6 N/A
Majority 4,493 42.8 N/A
Turnout 48.6 N/A
UUP hold Swing N/A
General Election 1965: Ards[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
UUP William Long 7,442 81.0 +9.6
NI Labour E. Bell 1,740 19.0 N/A
Majority 5,720 62.0 +19.2
Turnout 45.1 -3.5
UUP hold Swing N/A

At the 1969 Northern Ireland general election, William Long was elected unopposed.[2]

  • Parliament prorogued 30 March 1972 and abolished 18 July 1973
gollark: You should use OpenPOWER.
gollark: RISC-V isn't open enough, actually.
gollark: I kind of want smart home things, but I have no actual usecase and the maintenance burden it would add to my mess of scripts and infrastructure would likely be bad.
gollark: There are the naïve enthusiastic people who go buy consumer IoT devices and them replace then when they inevitably stop being supported, the grizzled sysadmin/developer types who have seen the horrors of modern computing and don't trust it, the mystical few who are competent enough to run their own stuff and have it work, and people who want to be/think they are that but who spend all their time recompiling the kernel on their smart fridge.
gollark: https://pics.me.me/i-work-in-it-which-is-the-reason-our-house-41514357.png

References

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