First published in 1904 and twice reprinted, this book strongly
influenced nationalist debate between 1904 and 1921. Its central
proposal - the withdrawal of Irish elected representatives from
Westminster - was inherited from the Hungarian Franz Deak's policy
of non co-operation with the imperial parliament in Vienna in the
1860s. The idea of the dual monarchy, adopted by Austria and
Hungary in 1867 in which each recognised the Austrian Emperor but
had separate parliaments, continued to be advocated by a few Irish
politicians as late as the 1920s. Griffith also expounds here his
protectionist economic views which influenced Irish government
policy for several decades.
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