William Norton

Norton was born in Dublin in 1900. He joined the postal service in 1916. By 1920, he was a prominent member of the Irish Postal Union and the wider trade union movement in Ireland. From 1924 to 1957, he served as Secretary of the Post Office Workers' Union.
He was elected as a Labour Party TD for Dublin County at a by-election in 1926, but was defeated at the June 1927 general election. On constitutional matters, Norton opposed the introduction into force of the Executive Authority (External Relations) Act 1936 which continued a role for the British King after the King was removed from the Constitution of Ireland. In Norton’s view, the association with the British King should have ended when Edward VIII “voluntarily relinquished his objectionable role here”.
In Professor Tom Garvin's review of the 1950s 'News from a New Republic', he comes in for praise as a moderniser. Garvin places him with a cross party group including Gerard Sweetman and Daniel Morrissey of Fine Gael as well as Seán Lemass of Fianna Fáil who were pushing a modernising agenda. He represented Kildare from 1932 until his death in 1963.
In 1932, he became leader of the Labour Party. In the First Inter-Party Government from 1948 to 1951, Norton became Tánaiste and Minister for Social Welfare. In the Second Inter-Party Government from 1954 to 1957, Norton served as Tánaiste and Minister for Industry and Commerce.
William Norton died in Dublin in 1963. His son Patrick Norton served as a TD for Kildare from 1965 to 1969. Provided by Wikipedia
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by Venkatanarayan, Avinashnarayan, Raulji, Payal, Norton, William, Chakravarti, Deepavali, Coarfa, Cristian, Su, Xiaohua, Sandur, Santosh K., Ramirez, Marc S., Lee, Jaehuk, Kingsley, Charles V., Sananikone, Eliot F., Rajapakshe, Kimal, Naff, Katherine, Parker-Thornburg, Jan, Bankson, James A., Tsai, Kenneth Y., Gunaratne, Preethi H., Flores, Elsa R.
Published 2014
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