Minister of Finance (Northern Ireland)

The Minister of Finance (de facto Deputy Prime Minister) was a member of the Executive Committee of the Privy Council of Northern Ireland (Cabinet) in the Parliament of Northern Ireland which governed Northern Ireland from 1921 to 1972. The post was combined with that of the Prime Minister of Northern Ireland for a brief period in 1940 – 41 and was vacant for two weeks during 1953, following the death of incumbent Minister John Maynard Sinclair. The Office was often seen as being occupied by the Prime Minister's choice of successor. Two Ministers of Finance went on to be Prime Minister, while two more, Maginness and Jack Andrews were widely seen as possible successors to the Premiership.

# Name Took Office Prime Minister Party
1. Hugh MacDowell Pollock 7 June 1921 Craigavon UUP
2. John Miller Andrews 21 April 1937 Craigavon, Andrews UUP
3. John Milne Barbour 16 January 1941 Andrews UUP
4. John Maynard Sinclair 6 May 1943 Brookeborough UUP
Vacant 31 January 1953 Brookeborough N/A
5. Brian Maginess 13 February 1953 Brookeborough UUP
6. George Boyle Hanna 20 April 1956 Brookeborough UUP
7. Terence O'Neill 21 September 1956 Brookeborough UUP
8. Jack Andrews 25 March 1963 O'Neill UUP
9. Ivan Neill 22 July 1964 O'Neill UUP
10. Herbert Kirk 2 April 1965 O'Neill, Chichester-Clark, Faulkner UUP
Northern Ireland 1921–1972
This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
Northern Ireland 1921–1972

Deputy Prime Minister

From 3 May 1969, a separate and distinct office of Deputy Prime Minister was created and occupied by Jack Andrews, who was also Leader of the Senate.

Parliamentary and Financial Secretary to the Ministry of Finance

Office abolished 1943

Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Finance (and Chief Whip)

Office abolished 1969

Assistant Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Finance (and Assistant Chief Whip)

Office abolished 1969

gollark: I'm pretty worried about the effects of Spectre/Meltdown. Apparently Spectre, at least, affects basically all modern/high-performance CPUs, and can't be patched without large performance drops. It probably wouldn't have been an awful vulnerability to have around probably a few decades ago, but now basically everything executes some untrusted code (JS in browsers, cloud providers running people's workloads, etc.) Which probably means a significant security/speed tradeoff, and there's not really any right way for that to go...
gollark: https://xkcd.com/2115/
gollark: If you want to know, it's a picture of lemons.
gollark: They sound somehow worrying.
gollark: Nope!

References

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