Council of State (Ireland)
The Council of State is a body established by the Constitution of Ireland to advise the President of Ireland in the exercise of many of his or her discretionary, reserve powers. It also has authority to provide for the temporary exercise of the duties of the president in the event that these cannot be exercised by either the president or the Presidential Commission.
Members
The Council of State consists of a number of government officials, who sit ex officio, as well as certain former office holders and up to seven individuals of the president's own choosing. The ex officio members comprise the attorney general as well as individuals from each of three branches of government: legislature, executive and judiciary.Unlike most of the president's other duties, which must be conducted in accordance with the advice of the cabinet, the seven presidential appointees to the Council of State are chosen at the president's absolute discretion. These appointees retain their positions until the president's successor takes office.
Class | Office | Current members |
Ex officio: executive | Taoiseach | Micheál Martin |
Ex officio: executive | Tánaiste | Leo Varadkar |
Ex officio: legislature | Ceann Comhairle | Seán Ó Fearghaíl |
Ex officio: legislature | Mark Daly | |
Ex officio: judiciary | Chief Justice | Frank Clarke |
Ex officio: judiciary | President of the Court of Appeal | George Birmingham |
Ex officio: judiciary | President of the High Court | Mary Irvine |
Ex officio | Attorney General | Paul Gallagher |
Former officeholders | President | Mary Robinson, Mary McAleese |
Former officeholders | Taoiseach | John Bruton, Bertie Ahern, Brian Cowen, Enda Kenny, Leo Varadkar |
Former officeholders | Chief Justice | Ronan Keane, John L. Murray, Susan Denham |
Former officeholders | President of the Executive Council of the Irish Free State | None |
Cara Augustenborg, Sinéad Burke, Sindy Joyce, Maurice Malone, Johnston McMaster, Mary Murphy, |
The Constitution explicitly states that members appointed by the President may resign, or be dismissed by the President. Former office holders are members if "able and willing to act as a member", which implies an ability to resign; but there is no provision for dismissing them. When the McCracken Tribunal found in 1997 that former Taoiseach Charles Haughey had misled the Tribunal, there were calls for him to formally resign from the Council of State. He did not do so, although he sent his regrets to subsequent meetings of the Council until his death.
Members of the Council of State may be excused from jury duty.
The Constitution specifies a declaration of office, "in the presence of Almighty God", which a new member must take before attending an official meeting. Tánaiste Éamon Gilmore, a declared agnostic, sought legal advice before attending the 2013 Council meeting. The 1996 Constitutional Review Group recommended making the religious part optional.
Role
Before exercising any reserve power but one, the President is required to seek the advice of the Council of State, although not required to follow its advice. The one exception, where the President has "absolute discretion", is in deciding to refuse a dissolution to a Taoiseach who has lost the confidence of the Dáil. The remaining discretionary powers, which do require prior consultation with the Council of State, are as follows :- Convening a meeting of either or both Houses of the Oireachtas
- Addressing the Oireachtas
- Addressing the Nation
- Establishing a committee of privileges to resolve a dispute between the Houses over a putative money bill
- Abridging the time for considering a bill in the Seanad
- Referring a bill to the Supreme Court to test its Constitutionality
- Referring a bill to the people for an "ordinary referendum"
The Third Amendment of the Constitution Bill, 1958, which was defeated at a referendum, gave a role for the Council of State in the work of an envisaged constituency boundary commission.
Close to the time of its inception, the Council of State was likened to a privy council, although Jim Duffy calls this "more apparent than real" as it has no legislative or judicial functions. Gemma Hussey, who was a member of the Council of State in 1989–90, described it as "largely a symbolic body".
Meetings
Working meetings called by the President for consultation under the terms of the Constitution are rare, though less so since the election of Mary Robinson in 1990. Four meetings have related to an address the Oireachtas, which requires the approval of the Government as well as the consultation of the Council of State. All other meetings have been to advise the President about whether to refer a bill to the Supreme Court.Meetings are held in Áras an Uachtaráin. Members arrive 15 minutes before the meeting starts, and are served light refreshments in the Council of State Room. At the first meeting of the Council in Mary McAleese's first term, there was a photocall in the State Reception Rooms. The Council's deliberations are held in camera, as for cabinet meetings, though there is no explicit requirement for confidentiality. The Irish Times obtained details of a 1984 meeting from an unnamed attendee, while James Dooge discussed a 1976 meeting years later with journalist Stephen Collins. Members are seated in order of precedence in the Presidents' Room around a 1927 dining table purchased by President de Valera in 1961. The Secretary-General to the President serves as clerk to the Council. The Council does not offer collective advice; the President asks each member in turn to comment, and further discussion may involve several members.
Apart from the Council of State's official meetings, its members are invited to important state functions, such as state funerals, the National Day of Commemoration, and the inauguration of the next President. The first President, Douglas Hyde, dined monthly with the members of his Council of State. The seven new Presidential nominees of Mary McAleese's second term were introduced at a luncheon in the Áras the month after their appointment. Campaigning in the 1990 presidential election, Mary Robinson promised to have meetings of the Council regularly rather than on "an emergency basis".
Addresses to the Oireachtas
Date of meeting | President | Topic of Address | Date of Address | Notes |
20 December 1968 | Éamon de Valera | 50th anniversary of the First Dáil | Brendan Corish was the only absentee from the Council of State meeting. | |
29 June 1992 | Mary Robinson | "the Irish Identity in Europe" | ||
24 January 1995 | Mary Robinson | "Cherishing the Irish Diaspora" | ||
28 October 1999 | Mary McAleese | Marking the millennium | Charles Haughey, Albert Reynolds, and Mary Robinson were absent. |
Referring of bills
In some cases, the President has decided to sign the bill without referring it to the Supreme Court; in other cases, the President has referred the bill and the court has upheld its constitutionality; and in other cases the Court has found some or all of the referred portions to be unconstitutional. It is not revealed whether some or all members of the Council of State counselled for or against the President's course of action.Jim Duffy in 1991 criticised the lack of supporting resources for members of the Council; at meetings they were provided only with a copy of the Constitution. By contrast, prior to the 2013 meeting to discuss the Protection of Life During Pregnancy Bill, a dossier of background information was sent to each member, including legal briefs and news reports.
Although the serving Chief Justice is a member of the Council, by convention they do not get involved in substantive discussions on the bill, as they will be involved in the deliberations if the bill does get referred. Therefore, retired Chief Justices and the President of the High Court play a greater role in the discussion. The 2013 meeting was the first at which two serving members of the Supreme Court were present, as John Murray is an ex-Chief Justice but was then an ordinary member of the Court, the first such since the term of the Chief Justice was limited to seven years in 1997.
Date of meeting | Bill | President | Outcome | Notes |
Referred and upheld | See Offences against the State Acts 1939–1998. W. T. Cosgrave was the only absent member of the Council. The Dublin North-West branch of the Labour Party passed a resolution urging William Norton to withdraw from the Council "which exists for the purpose of endorsing Fianna Fáil restrictions on liberty". Hyde instructed attendees not to discuss "political considerations" or "legal arguments", which limited the value of the meeting. | |||
Hyde's 1940 instruction was not repeated, after De Valera advised Michael McDunphy, Secretary-General to the President, that it was unhelpful. | ||||
Signed without referral | Absentees were George Gavan Duffy, Douglas Hyde, Timothy Sullivan, W. T. Cosgrave, and Richard Mulcahy. | |||
Referred and upheld | ||||
Signed without referral | All members attended. On 7 March, before the President announced a decision, the was introduced and passed by the Oireachtas. This pre-emptively cancelled the contentious sections of the original Bill. Next day, the President signed both bills into law. | |||
Referred and upheld | James Dooge, Cathaoirleach of the Seanad, was absent. | |||
Referred and upheld | The meeting, which discussed two bills, lasted 4 hours. Maurice E. Dockrell was the only absentee. President Ó Dálaigh and Attorney General Declan Costello debated points of law in great detail. Minister Paddy Donegan described the President's decision to refer the bill as a "thundering disgrace", precipitating Ó Dálaigh's resignation. James Dooge later suggested that Ó Dálaigh was more concerned with asserting his right to refer the bill than casting doubt on its Constitutionality. As the bill was formally stated to be emergency legislation, most Constitutional safeguards did not apply to it. | |||
Signed without referral | Same meeting as preceding | |||
Referred and struck down | ||||
Referred and struck down | Absentees were Siobhán McKenna, Seán McEntee, and James Dillon. The bill would have given British citizens the right to vote in all elections in the Republic of Ireland. The Ninth Amendment of the Constitution in 1984 removed the obstacle with regard to Dáil elections but not Presidential elections or referenda. The Electoral Act, 1985 extended the franchise for Dáil elections. | |||
Signed without referral | Siobhán McKenna and Máirín Bean Uí Dhálaigh were absent. | |||
Referred and upheld | Absentees were Tom O'Higgins and Jack Lynch. | |||
Signed without referral | ||||
Referred and struck down | ||||
Signed without referral | ||||
Referred and upheld | The act sprang from the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of Ireland in 1992. See also abortion in the Republic of Ireland. | |||
Referred and struck down | 15 of 22 members attended, including the Taoiseach. After the bill was struck down, the Employment Equality Act 1998 was passed instead. | |||
Referred and struck down | Charles Haughey was absent. | |||
Referred Part V; upheld | ||||
Referred §§ 5 and 10; upheld | Same meeting as preceding | |||
of the | Signed without referral | |||
Referred and struck down | Charles Haughey was the only absentee. | |||
Signed without referral | ||||
Signed without referral | 19 of 22 members of the Council were present; the meeting lasted over 3 hours. See also blasphemy law in Ireland. | |||
Signed without referral | Same meeting as preceding | |||
Signed without referral | See 2008–2011 Irish banking crisis | |||
Signed without referral | See Protection of Life During Pregnancy Act 2013. Of 24 members, 21 attended; Mary Robinson, John Bruton and Albert Reynolds were absent, though Robinson and Bruton made written submissions. The meeting ran from 3.15pm to 6.45pm. | |||
Signed without referral | Liam Cosgrave, Mary Robinson and Gearóid Ó Tuathaigh did not attend. The press release stated the meeting would consider whether:
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