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・ Leader of the Opposition (Greece)
・ Leader of the Opposition (Hungary)
・ Leader of the Opposition (India)
・ Leader of the Opposition (Ireland)
・ Leader of the Opposition (Israel)
・ Leader of the Opposition (Jamaica)
・ Leader of the Opposition (Japan)
・ Leader of the Opposition (Malaysia)
・ Leader of the Opposition (Malta)
・ Leader of the Opposition (Manitoba)
・ Leader of the Opposition (Mauritius)
・ Leader of the Opposition (New Brunswick)
・ Leader of the Opposition (New South Wales)
・ Leader of the Opposition (New Zealand)
・ Leader of the Opposition (Newfoundland and Labrador)
Leader of the Opposition (Northern Ireland)
・ Leader of the Opposition (Northern Territory)
・ Leader of the Opposition (Nova Scotia)
・ Leader of the Opposition (Ontario)
・ Leader of the Opposition (Pakistan)
・ Leader of the Opposition (Peru)
・ Leader of the Opposition (Prince Edward Island)
・ Leader of the Opposition (Queensland)
・ Leader of the Opposition (Singapore)
・ Leader of the Opposition (Solomon Islands)
・ Leader of the Opposition (South Africa)
・ Leader of the Opposition (South Australia)
・ Leader of the Opposition (Spain)
・ Leader of the Opposition (Sri Lanka)
・ Leader of the Opposition (Tasmania)


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Leader of the Opposition (Northern Ireland) : ウィキペディア英語版
Leader of the Opposition (Northern Ireland)

The Leader of the Opposition in Northern Ireland was theoretically the leader of the largest party in the House of Commons of Northern Ireland which was not the government. The position was eliminated in 1972 when the Stormont Parliament was abolished and replaced by direct rule from London.
Through the existence of the Stormont Parliament, members of the Irish Nationalist opposition often practiced a policy of abstentionism where they would run for seats in the parliament but refuse to take them if elected in order not to give legitimacy to British rule or the partition of the island and refused to accept recognition as the Official Opposition until 1965 despite the fact that they were the second party in the House of Commons in terms of seats won from 1925 until 1972 and had been tied for second with Sinn Féin (which was also abstentionist) in the first Northern Ireland House of Commons from 1921 to 1925.
Though the Nationalist Party was consistently the second largest party in the House of Commons its members refused to take their seats in the legislature until 1924, then resumed the abstentionist policy in the 1930s to protest the abolition of proportional representation. From 1937, T. J. Campbell and Richard Byrne were the only Nationalist MPs to take their seats until Byrne's death in 1942 and Campbell's resignation in 1945. It was not until 1965 that the Nationalist Party agreed to form the Official Opposition in the House of Commons. Eddie McAteer served as Leader of the Opposition from 1965 until he lost his seat in the 1969 election. Roderick O'Connor succeeded McAteer as Nationalist Party leader but the party again withdrew from its role as Official Opposition.
==Leaders of the Opposition==
This is a list of people who served as the ''de facto'' Leaders of the Opposition of Northern Ireland, being leaders of the largest party in the House of Commons of Northern Ireland which was not the government.
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
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抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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