The Nominated Assembly was the first interregnum Parliament to include Members from Ireland, in an attempt to represent the ‘commonwealth of England, Scotland and Ireland’ as a whole.
Secondly, some insight into the nominations of 1653 can be gained from a comparison with the elections to the first protectorate Parliament in August 1654. In the latter case, the English council decided to create 20 constituencies, returning 30 Members, once again arranged by province, with elections to be held under military supervision in garrison towns; but the Irish council, still led by Fleetwood, was again given considerable influence over the electoral process.
some of the commissioners in Ireland were of opinion, that if the proprietors should choose, they would return such as were enemies to the English [ie. army] interest, and therefore proposed that for this time Cromwell and his council should nominate the 30 who were to be chosen for that nation.Ludlow, Mems. i. 387.
This situation was also hinted at by one Old Protestant, John Percivalle, who reported in July 1654 that ‘Lord Fleetwood ... thinks Ireland not yet in a fit posture to elect their own members’.
Returned six members to the Nominated Assembly of 1653
