No. 336 NAI DT S1801O
DUBLIN, 10 November 1925
BOUNDARY COMMISSION.
The President reported on interviews which he, the Minister for Justice and the Minister for Finance1 had with certain members of the Party and also with a deputation from East Donegal regarding the forecasts of the Boundary report which had been published in the Press.2
Consideration was given to a letter received from the Secretary of the Boundary Commission inviting a representative of the Government to a Conference on the 19th instant,3 to discuss certain matters arising out of the imminence of the publication of the Commission's report, as well as to a letter from Mr. Cahir Healy, M.P., asking to be informed whether the Executive Council and representatives of the areas concerned would be consulted before the report was signed.
It was decided:-
(a) that so far as signature of the report is concerned it is a matter for Dr.
MacNeill's sole discretion,
and
(b) that, accordingly, the Council does not require to be kept informed of the proposed line beforehand.
A letter is to be sent to Mr. Healy on the basis of these decisions.4
It was agreed that the Attorney General should represent the Government at the proposed Conference with the Boundary Commission on 19th instant, and that he should press for a copy of the full records of the Commission to be given to this Government. He was authorised to state that this Govt. favours the immediate publication of all evidence given before the Commission.
The Royal Irish Academy's Documents on Irish Foreign Policy series has published an eBook of confidential correspondence on the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty negotiations.
The international network of Editors of Diplomatic Documents was founded in 1988. Delegations from different parts of the world met for the first time in London in 1989.
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