Belfast East, was a former potential Dáil Éireann parliamentary constituency located in Northern Ireland despite being outside the Dáil's jurisdiction. It was a Dáil constituency from 1921 to 1922.
Contents
Representation
The constituency was, in Irish republican theory, entitled to return four Teachtaí Dála (known in English as Deputies) in 1921 to serve in the Irish Republic's Second Dáil. None took their seat in the Dáil.
The First Dáil, passed a motion at its last meeting on 10 May 1921, the first three parts of which make explicit the republican view.
Sinn Féin used the elections in 1921 to elect the Dáil. The Second Dáil first met on 16 August 1921. It last met on 8 June 1922.
From the Third Dáil onwards the Dáil represented only the twenty-six counties which formed the Irish Free State.
Belfast East is also a United Kingdom Parliament constituency. It has been represented by one member from 1922. The constituency sent four MPs to the Northern Ireland House of Commons 1921-1929.
Boundaries and Boundary Changes
Belfast East was a borough constituency comprising part of the county borough of Belfast. It included Dock, Pottinger and Victoria wards.
Between 1918-1921 the area was divided into two single-member constituencies, Belfast Pottinger and Belfast Victoria.
Politics of the constituency
Even in a proportional representation election the Unionists won all four seats. The Nationalists and Sinn Féin combined could not accumulate a quota of more than one-fifth of the votes.
Elections
In 1921 parliamentary representatives of the constituency were elected using the single transferable vote method of proportional representation.