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・ John J. Muccio
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・ John J. Murphy
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・ John J. O'Connell
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・ John J. O'Connor (artist)
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John J. O'Kelly
・ John J. O'Malley
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・ John J. Patterson
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・ John J. Pershing College
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John J. O'Kelly : ウィキペディア英語版
John J. O'Kelly

John Joseph O'Kelly (known as Sceilg;〔A pen name he took which refers to the island of Sceilig Mhichíl, which he could see from his childhood home on Valentia Island.〕 1872 – 26 March 1957) was an Irish politician, author and publisher.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Mr. Seán (Sceilg) Ó Ceallaigh )〕 He was a president of the Gaelic League and of Sinn Féin. He was born on Valentia Island off the County Kerry coast.
==Political career==
He joined Sinn Féin at its inaugural meeting on 5 November 1905. Following the 1916 Easter Rising, O'Kelly joined the Irish Nation League and became treasurer of the ''Irish National Aid and Volunteers' Dependants' Fund'' for the relief of prisoners and their families. In February 1917 he was arrested and deported to England where he was interned without trial for several months. On his release O'Kelly was elected to the Provisional Committee of the newly merged Irish Nation League and Sinn Féin, thereafter called Sinn Féin. He was appointed editor of the influential "''Catholic Bulletin''".〔(Recent book on the Bulletin )〕 In the United Kingdom general election, 1918 he was elected as a Sinn Féin MP for Louth by 255 votes in what was the closest contest in Ireland in that election. The closeness of the contest was due to the strong AOH organisation in the county that campaigned for outgoing North Galway MP Richard Hazleton of the Irish Parliamentary Party.
O'Kelly took his seat in Dáil Éireann as a Sinn Féin Teachta Dála and was Leas-Cheann Comhairle (Deputy chairman) from 1919–21.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=John J. O'Kelly )〕 He was Secretary for Education in the Government of the 2nd Dáil. From 1919 to 1923, he was President of the Gaelic League. He opposed the Anglo-Irish Treaty that was ratified by the Dáil in January 1922, and refused to accept the legitimacy of the Irish Free State established in December 1922. He and others maintained that the Irish Republic continued to exist and that the rump of the Second Dáil, composed of those anti-Treaty TDs who had refused to take their seats in what became the Free State parliament, was the only legitimate government for the whole of Ireland. In June 1922, he was elected to the Third Dáil for the constituency of Louth/Meath but abstained from taking his seat. In August 1923, standing as a Republican for the Meath constituency, he was defeated for an abstentionist seat in the 4th Dáil. He was again defeated in the Roscommon by-election of 1925, his last election attempt. After the resignation of Éamon de Valera as president of Sinn Féin in 1926, O'Kelly, who maintained an abstentionist policy towards Dáil Éireann, was elected in his place and remained in this position until 1931 when Brian O'Higgins took over the leadership.
O'Kelly was hostile towards the 1937 Constitution of Ireland, claiming it was insufficiently supportive of
Irish Republicanism and that the Constitution also did not require the President of Ireland to be of Irish
birth.〔Dermot Keogh and Dr. Andrew McCarthy, ''The making of the Irish Constitution 1937: Bunreacht na hÉireann''. Mercier Press, 2007 (p.193).〕
Sceilg was unusual among Irish Republicans in that he regarded Daniel O'Connell and T.M. Healy as political heroes. This apparently reflected local patriotism (both men came from south-western Ireland near to Sceilg's own birthplace) and Sceilg's own devout Catholicism, which led him to exalt O'Connell's achievement of Catholic Emancipation and Healy's claims that the adultery of Charles Stewart Parnell with Katharine O'Shea made Parnell unfit for political leadership. Sceilg was also explicitly hostile to the Spanish Republic declared in 1931, believing it to be anti-Catholic and supported by pro-British Freemasons.

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