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Ireland votes by landslide to legalise abortion in historic referendum

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Ireland has voted by a landslide to legalise abortion in a stunning outcome that marks a dramatic defeat for the Catholic church’s one-time domination of the Republic.

The Irish electorate voted by 1,429,981 votes to 723,632 in favour of abolishing a controversial constitutional amendment that gave equal legal status to the lives of a foetus and the woman carrying it.

By voting yes in unexpected numbers to abolish the eighth amendment to the Irish constitution, the country has enabled the government in Dublin to introduce abortion in Ireland’s health service up to 12 weeks into pregnancy.


Saturday’s triumph for abortion reformers occurred only months before a papal visit to the country – the first since John Paul II’s tour of Ireland in 1979. After Pope Francis leaves Ireland in August, the Irish minority government, with the backing of opposition parties, will within weeks start the process of drawing up legislation to allow for abortion, which was once an unthinkable political project in Ireland.


Welcoming the massive endorsement in favour of reform, Ireland’s prime minister, Leo Varadkar, promised to introduce legal terminations by the end of this year.

Describing the vote as “the culmination of a quiet revolution in Ireland”, the taoiseach said voters had given his Fine Gael-led government “a clear mandate” to bring in legislation that will legalise abortion up to 12 weeks.

Orla O’Connor, co-director of the Together for Yes campaign, said it was “a monumental day for women in Ireland”, calling the result “a rejection of an Ireland that treats women as second-class citizens”.


The counting of votes reflected the findings of two exit polls released on Friday night that showed support for yes running at 68% to 69%.

Support for abolishing the amendment and paving the way for legalising abortion was widespread across the country.

Ireland’s foreign minister, Simon Coveney, stressed that the outcome proved this was “not Dublin versus the rest … not a rural-urban division”.

One of the first constituencies to declare a result – Dublin Central – had nearly 77% voting yes. Yet even in traditionally conservative Roscommon/East Galway the first tallies from the count showed 57% for yes and 43% for no. Other rural constituencies such as Carlow/Kilkenny also voted 63.5% in favour of change.

In the last major referendum, the vote to legalise same-sex marriage three years ago, Roscommon was the only area to vote no.

Ireland has changed utterly: the cruel eighth amendment is history | Ivana Bacik
The overall turnout of Friday’s abortion referendum, at 64.51%, exceeded the 60.5% that voted in the 2015 marriage plebiscite.

As early as 10.30am on Saturday, prominent anti-abortion campaigners had acknowledged they had lost.

In a Facebook post, Save the Eighth activist John McGuirk said he was “broken-hearted” over the result. Addressing fellow no campaigners, he said: “Today will be a hard and difficult day, but hold your heads high. It is never wrong to speak up for what you believe in. It is wrong to say silent, and especially wrong to stay silent when the crowd is totally against you.”

Victory for the yes side means that the only part of the United Kingdom and Ireland where abortion remains banned in almost all circumstances is Northern Ireland.

Both Amnesty International and the Liberal Democrat leader, Vince Cable, called on Saturday afternoon for the region’s near-total ban on abortion to be lifted.
 
Seeing people lay flowers and badges at the mural of Savita last night was a very touching moment tbh. Her death wasnt in vain.

I myself find the idea of abortion on demand uncomfortable. However I trust women to use abortion in a safe and proper manner, and only when absolutely necessary. Also, abortions were happening anyway so keeping it illegal was just dangerous and stupid.

Another seismic moment in Irish social history and one step closer to kicking the Catholic Church out on their behinds.
 
How the hell have you guys managed to elect a gay Indian as your Prime minister is still beyond me.
 
Seeing people lay flowers and badges at the mural of Savita last night was a very touching moment tbh. Her death wasnt in vain.

I myself find the idea of abortion on demand uncomfortable. However I trust women to use abortion in a safe and proper manner, and only when absolutely necessary. Also, abortions were happening anyway so keeping it illegal was just dangerous and stupid.

Another seismic moment in Irish social history and one step closer to kicking the Catholic Church out on their behinds.

Well said. There were stories of Catholic women having stillborn babies but weren’t allowed to get abortions and had to give birth.

Awful stuff and glad that this law has been put forward.
 
What is sad is that, this is up for debate still in so many countries. Even the supposedly progressive ones.

Well done ireland
 
Ireland's Leo Varadkar has announced he is stepping down as prime minister

Mr Varadkar, 45, has led the Fine Gael party since 2017 and served as Taoiseach - Ireland's prime minister - twice.

His first stint leading the country lasted from 2017 to 2020, before he took up the role as Tanaiste - deputy prime minister - from 2020 until December 2022.

He has been the Irish premier since then in a "rotating Taoiseach" agreement that underpinned his party's coalition with Fianna Fail and the Green Party.

Mr Varadkar became the first openly gay Taoiseach when he came out during the 2015 marriage equality referendum.

It comes as the Irish government was defeated in twin referendums earlier this month.

Almost 74% of voters rejected the care amendment, which proposed removing references to a woman's "life within the home" and mothers' "duties in the home" when providing care, replacing them with an article acknowledging the importance of family members in general, without defining them by gender.

Some 67.7% of voters rejected the second amendment, which had proposed extending the meaning of "family" beyond marriage in the constitution, instead including households based on "durable" relationships.

 
Simon Harris has a clear path to becoming the new leader of Fine Gael - and taoiseach - after all the other frontrunners have dropped out of the race

It comes a day after Leo Varadkar's shock announcement that he was standing down as Fine Gael leader and would step aside as taoiseach once his successor is appointed.

Heather Humphreys, the social protection minister, and Jennifer Carroll MacNeill, the minister of state, both ruled themselves out on Thursday afternoon, paving the way for Mr Harris.

Justice minister Helen McEntee ruled herself out as a leadership candidate earlier on Thursday, as Fine Gael politicians began to publicly back Mr Harris, the minister for further and higher education.

One of those was Ms McEntee herself, who described Mr Harris as "a great colleague" and "a great communicator".

"I know he will bring huge energy to this important role," she posted on X.

If he was to take over from Mr Varadkar, Mr Harris would become the country's youngest ever taoiseach at the age of 37, taking that title from his predecessor.

Fine Gael minister of state Patrick O'Donovan is also among those who have thrown their support behind Mr Harris.

He said: "I think at the moment, where Fine Gael is, as we're a year out from a general election, we have plenty of time, and plenty of scope to I think rebuild the organisation, refocus on the issues that are of importance to us and I think Simon is best placed to do that."

Both Fine Gael and their largest coalition partner, Fianna Fail, are trailing the main opposition Sinn Fein party in the polls.

Whoever wins the leadership will have up to 12 months before a general election to try to overturn a wide opinion poll deficit.

Others backing Mr Harris include Fine Gael TD and junior minister Neale Richmond, TD and former junior minister Frank Feighan, senators Tim Lombard and Michael Carrigy and MEPs Frances Fitzgerald and Maria Walsh.

Enterprise minister Simon Coveney, who ran against Mr Varadkar in the last Fine Gael leadership contest, ruled himself out on Wednesday.

Mr Harris was the early favourite with many bookmakers and had the backing of several politicians before nominations opened.

However, any rival candidate still has until Monday to enter the race.

Mr Harris first became a member of parliament at the age of 24, after being elected as a local councillor in his native county of Wicklow, two years before in 2009.

His public profile rose significantly when he served as the country's health minister during the COVID-19 pandemic. Before that he also served as a junior minister in the finance department from 2014 to 2016.

 
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