Cork Civic Party
The Civic Party was a pro-business political party in Cork city in Ireland from 1945 to 1966. It was a continuation of the Business Party of the 1930s, supported by the chamber of commerce, and also attracted three outgoing Fine Gael councillors among nine candidates in the 1945 elections to the 21-member Cork Corporation (now Cork City Council). Two of those three were successful, as were three others, including Liam de Róiste. The party had links to the Knights of Columbanus. As the Dáil Éireann parties became more prominent in local politics from the 1950s, the Civic Party went into a slow decline, although Valentine Jago, a Methodist businessman, served as Lord Mayor of Cork for the 1957–58 civic year. The party secured three councillors from 11 candidates at the 1950 elections, two fr
Wikipage disambiguates
primaryTopic
Cork Civic Party
The Civic Party was a pro-business political party in Cork city in Ireland from 1945 to 1966. It was a continuation of the Business Party of the 1930s, supported by the chamber of commerce, and also attracted three outgoing Fine Gael councillors among nine candidates in the 1945 elections to the 21-member Cork Corporation (now Cork City Council). Two of those three were successful, as were three others, including Liam de Róiste. The party had links to the Knights of Columbanus. As the Dáil Éireann parties became more prominent in local politics from the 1950s, the Civic Party went into a slow decline, although Valentine Jago, a Methodist businessman, served as Lord Mayor of Cork for the 1957–58 civic year. The party secured three councillors from 11 candidates at the 1950 elections, two fr
has abstract
The Civic Party was a pro-busi ...... Jago later joined Fianna Fáil.
@en
Wikipage page ID
41,404,280
Wikipage revision ID
586,915,581
subject
hypernym
type
comment
The Civic Party was a pro-busi ...... at the 1950 elections, two fr
@en
label
Cork Civic Party
@en