Spring marks Labour Party centenary

AT THE time of the foundation of the Labour Party 100 years ago, the death rate in Dublin was the highest of any city in Europe…

AT THE time of the foundation of the Labour Party 100 years ago, the death rate in Dublin was the highest of any city in Europe and higher than Calcutta, former tánaiste and Labour leader Dick Spring said last night.

He was delivering a lecture at the Glasnevin Museum in Dublin to mark the centenary of James Connolly’s motion, passed by the Irish Trades Union Congress 100 years ago this month, to establish an Irish Labour Party.

Mr Spring pointed out that emigration was also rampant at the time, and that 345,000 people had left the island of Ireland in the previous decade. These were the conditions in which Connolly took his political initiative.

“Connolly was acutely aware of the imminence of Home Rule,” Mr Spring said. “He posed the question, ‘When the representatives of Ireland came to meet in the old historic building in Dublin [College Green] were the workers to be the only class that was not to be represented?’.”

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The motion which led to the foundation of the Labour Party was put forward by Connolly at the ITUC annual meeting in Clonmel, Co Tipperary , on May 28th, 1912.

Mr Spring pointed out that 13 deceased Labour members of the Dáil and Seanad were interred in Glasnevin, “one of the jewels in the crown of the State”.

The attendance included Tánaiste and Labour Party leader Eamon Gilmore as well as Minister for Arts, Heritage and Gaeltacht Affairs, Jimmy Deenihan, former Labour minister for health Barry Desmond and former Fianna Fáil minister of state Martin Mansergh.

The lecture was part of the official series to mark the series of centenary commemorations and was hosted by the Glasnevin Trust under chairman John Green at the request of Mr Deenihan.

Deaglán  De Bréadún

Deaglán De Bréadún

Deaglán De Bréadún, a former Irish Times journalist, is a contributor to the newspaper