5th Dáil
The 5th Dáil was elected at the June 1927 general election on 9 June 1927 and met on 23 June 1927. The members of Dáil Éireann, the House of Representatives of the Oireachtas of the Irish Free State, are known as TDs. It was one of two houses of the Oireachtas, sitting with the First Seanad constituted as the 1925 Seanad. The 5th Dáil was dissolved on 25 August 1927 by Governor-General Tim Healy, at the advice of the President of the Executive Council W. T. Cosgrave. The 5th Dáil is the shortest Dáil in the history of the state, lasting only.
Composition of the 5th Dáil
- 3rd Executive Council
- Providing confidence and supply
In line with its policy of abstentionism, the Sinn Féin TDs did not take their seats. Fianna Fáil also had a policy of abstentionism and their TDs did not take their seats when the Dáil met, but in August 1927, they abandoned the policy and took their seats, leading the executive council to lose its functional majority. Labour led the opposition until Fianna Fáil took their seats.