Adams, Gerry
In the late 1980s, Adams was prominent among those Irish republicans who begin to abandon violence in favor of political power, a process that resulted in 1994–96 to an 18-month IRA cease-fire. In 1998 Adams and Sinn Féin participated in peace negotiations that subsequently brought about (albeit with difficulty) the reestablishment of Northern Irish home rule and the disarming of the IRA. The peace process also transformed the once-outlawed Sinn Féin into the largest Northern Irish Catholic political party and a participant in Northern Ireland's government. Adams was elected to the Northern Irish assembly (1998–2010) and to the British parliament (1983–92, 1997–2011), but he refused to pledge allegiance to the British monarch and take his seat in the latter body. From 2011 to 2020 he served in the Irish Republic's parliament. He is also a prolific writer on Irish politics and history.
See his memoirs (1982, 2001, and 2003); biography by C. Keena (1990).
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