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The Taoiseach ( ''an'' instead of English ''the''., is the Head Of Government or Prime Minister of Ireland . The Taoiseach is appointed by the President upon the nomination of Dáil Éireann (the lower house of Oireachtas ), and must, while he or she remains in office, retain the support of a majority in the Dáil. The current Taoiseach is Bertie Ahern , TD , leader of the Fianna Fáil party. OVERVIEW Under the Constitution Of Ireland the Taoiseach must be appointed from among the members of Dáil Éireann. In the event that the Taoiseach loses the support of a majority in Dáil Éireann, he is not automatically removed from office but, rather, is compelled ''either'' to resign ''or'' to persuade the President to dissolve the Dáil. The President may refuse to grant a dissolution, and, in effect, force the Taoiseach to resign, but, to date, no president has exercised this prerogative (though the option arose in 1944, twice in 1982 and would have arisen in 1994 had Albert Reynolds chosen, following his Dáil defeat, to seek a dissolution rather than resign). The Taoiseach may lose the support of Dáil Éireann by the passage of a Vote Of No Confidence , the failure of a vote of confidence or, alternatively, the Dáil may refuse '' Supply ''.One example of the Dáil refusing supply occurred in January 1982 when the then Fine Gael – Labour government of Garret FitzGerald lost a vote on the budget. In the event of the Taoiseach's resignation, he continues to exercise the duties and functions of his office until the appointment of a successor. ''See Phantom Taoiseach ''. The Taoiseach nominates the remaining members of the Government , who are then, with the consent of the Dáil, appointed by the President. The Taoiseach also has authority to have fellow members of the cabinet dismissed from office. He or she is further responsible for appointing eleven members of the Senate . HISTORY The words ''Taoiseach'' and '', tòiseach translates as Clan chief and both words originally had similar meaning in the Goidelic languages of Scotland and Ireland. The related Welsh Language word '' Tywysog '' (current meaning "prince" - from "tywys", to lead) appears to have had a similar meaning. The modern position of Taoiseach was established by the 1937 Constitution Of Ireland , to replace the position of President Of The Executive Council of the 1922–1937 Irish Free State . The positions of Taoiseach and President of the Executive Council differed in certain fundamental respects. Under the Constitution Of The Irish Free State the latter was vested with considerably less power and was largely just the cabinet's presiding officer. For example, the President of the Executive Council could not dismiss a fellow minister. The Free State's cabinet, the Executive Council had to be disbanded and reformed entirely, in order to remove one of its number. The President of the Executive Council could also not personally seek a dissolution of Dáil Éireann from the head of state, that power belonging collectively to the Executive Council. In contrast, the Taoiseach created in 1937 possesses a much more powerful role. He can both instruct the President to dismiss ministers, and request a parliamentary dissolution on his own initiative.Among the most famous ministerial dismissals have been those of Charles Haughey and Neil Blaney during the Arms Crisis in 1970, Brian Lenihan in 1990 and Albert Reynolds , Padraig Flynn and Máire Geoghegan-Quinn in 1991. Historically, where there have been multi-party or coalition Governments, the Taoiseach has come from the leader of the largest party in the coalition. One exception to this was John A. Costello, who was not leader of his party, but an agreed choice to head the government, because the other parties refused to accept then Fine Gael leader Richard Mulcahy as Taoiseach. LIST OF TAOISIGH ''Main articles: List Of Irish Heads Of Government Since 1919 , List Of Taoisigh By Important Facts '' Living former Taoisigh There have never been more than six former Taoisigh alive at any one time. This has occurred only once:
FOOTNOTES SEE ALSO
FURTHER READING The book ''Chairman or Chief: The Role of the Taoiseach in Irish Government (1971)'' by Brian Farrell provides a good overview of the conflicting roles for An Taoiseach. Though long out of print, it may still be available in libraries or from AbeBooks. Biographies are also available of de Valera, Lemass, Lynch, Cosgrave, FitzGerald, Haughey, Reynolds and Ahern. FitzGerald wrote an autobiography, while an authorised biography was produced of de Valera. Some Biographies of former Taoisigh & Presidents of the Executive Council:
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