Gerry Adams (born October 6, 1948, Belfast, Northern Ireland) is the former president of Sinn Féin, long regarded as the political wing of the Irish Republican Army (IRA), and one of the chief architects of Sinn Féin’s shift to a policy of seeking a peaceful settlement to sectarian violence in Northern Ireland. He was elected several times to the British House of Commons for Belfast West but, following party policy, did not take his seat. He represented Belfast West (1998–2010) in the Northern Ireland Assembly before winning a seat in Ireland’s Dáil (parliament), representing Louth and East Meath (2011–20).
Born into a strongly republican family, Adams became involved in predominantly Roman Catholic civil rights protests in Belfast, Northern Ireland, which became increasingly violent in the late 1960s. By early 1970 he was suspected of heading a unit of the IRA, a republican paramilitary organization seeking the unification of predominantly Protestant Northern Ireland with the predominantly Roman Catholic Irish republic. In 1972, following two years of escalating violence by the IRA and Protestant paramilitary forces, Adams was interned without trial, though he was soon released to participate in secret peace talks with the British government. Following the failure of these talks, Adams reputedly became a top strategist in the IRA, though he consistently denied any direct involvement in the organization, which is illegal in both Northern Ireland and the republic. Adams was imprisoned again in 1973–76 and 1978 and was later officially charged with membership in the IRA, though he was never convicted.
In the late 1970s Adams began publicly advocating that the republican movement adopt a more political strategy, arguing that military victory was unlikely. He played a leading role in planning the hunger strikes undertaken by republican prisoners in Northern Ireland in 1981, which galvanized the Catholic community there. In 1983 Adams was elected president of Sinn Féin and a member of the British Parliament, but in keeping with party policy he refused to take his seat to avoid taking the compulsory oath of loyalty to the British queen. Reelected in 1987, he lost his seat to Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) representative Joe Hendron in 1992 but regained it in 1997. In 1988 Adams engaged in sometimes secret talks with SDLP leader John Hume, which led to follow-up talks in the early 1990s. The two leaders issued a joint statement to the British and Irish governments in 1993, identifying points of agreement and signaling the conditions under which Sinn Féin would be willing to engage in multiparty talks.
In January 1994 Adams was granted a visa to attend a conference in New York City. This controversial visa was followed by others, which allowed Adams to raise funds for Sinn Féin on American soil. The process of bringing Sinn Féin closer to the political mainstream, reflected in Adams’s visits to the United States, led to an 18-month IRA cease-fire beginning in August 1994. In September 1997, after the declaration of a second IRA cease-fire in July of that year, Adams and his negotiating team joined multiparty talks to end the conflict in Northern Ireland. Adams supported the Good Friday Agreement (Belfast Agreement) of April 1998 on steps leading to power-sharing self-government in the province, and he campaigned for acceptance of the accord within Sinn Féin and in referenda that were passed in Northern Ireland and the republic in May. In elections in June 1998 he won a seat in the new Northern Ireland Assembly.
The political process proceeded in fits and starts, and the British government suspended the assembly numerous times. Confidence in the devolved government was boosted in July 2005 when the IRA declared that it had ended its armed campaign and disposed of its weapons. In March 2007 Adams and Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) leader Ian Paisley reached a historic agreement to form a power-sharing government.
Charismatic, articulate, and possessing experience that generated respect within his constituency, Adams was a powerful leader of a highly organized movement. Along with Martin McGuinness, he led his party from its traditional violent rejection of British rule to parliamentary politics as part of a new government in Northern Ireland. While McGuinness served as deputy first minister in the power-sharing government with the DUP, Adams remained president of Sinn Féin.
In November 2010 Adams resigned from the Northern Ireland Assembly and announced his candidacy for a seat in the Dáil, the lower house of Ireland’s legislature. Despite a number of gaffes during the campaign, Adams rode a wave of anti-incumbent sentiment and was elected to the Dáil, representing the Louth and East Meath constituency, in 2011. His victory was part of an impressive Sinn Féin showing, as the party more than tripled its number of seats in the Dáil. In January 2011 Adams resigned his seat in the British Parliament.
In 2013, when Adams’s brother Liam was sent to prison for having raped and abused his daughter over a prolonged period, Adams’s reputation was damaged by the revelation that he had waited a number of years to inform the police of his brother’s actions. Adams’s problems continued in 2014, when he was arrested by the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) in connection with the investigation of the murder in 1972 of Jean McConville, the widowed mother of 10 who was kidnapped and killed by the IRA. Statements made by interviewees in an oral history of the Troubles (the so-called Boston College tapes) had implicated Adams in the murder, but Adams denied any involvement, and, after four days of questioning, he was released by the PSNI without charge. In opposition to these dark developments, during this period Adams developed a reputation as a pithy, mirthful presence on Twitter.
Adams and McGuinness began discussing the need for a new generation of leadership for Sinn Féin. McGuinness died in March 2017, and in November Adams announced his intention to step down as president in 2018 and to not contest his seat in the Dáil in the next election. “Leadership means knowing when it is time for change. That time is now,” Adams told Sinn Féin’s annual conference. In January 2018 Adams’s successor became clear when only Mary Lou McDonald, Sinn Féin’s deputy leader, stood to replace him, and her candidacy was formally ratified by the party’s high council. “The truth is that no one will ever fill Gerry Adams’s shoes…but the news is that I brought my own,” McDonald said after Adams introduced her as president-elect. Adams did not contest his seat in the Dáil in the 2020 election, and he left office in February.