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Role of women: Ireland votes against modernization

2024-03-09T23:47:34.930Z

Highlights: Ireland's government wanted to modernize two passages of text. The concept of family should be expanded and a passage on the role of women in the household should be reworded. More than two thirds of those eligible to vote voted against the proposed changes. Prime Minister Leo Varadkar had already admitted defeat in the afternoon: “It was our responsibility to convince a majority of people to vote yes and we clearly failed.” The predominantly Catholic country took a similar approach in the past and introduced full marriage equality for homosexual couples.



As of: March 10, 2024, 12:35 a.m

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In Ireland, people were able to decide on two constitutional changes in a double vote.

© Damien Storan/PA Wire/dpa

Ireland's government wanted to modernize two passages of text.

The concept of family should be expanded and a passage on the role of women in the household should be reworded.

But the plan failed.

Dublin - Ireland's government has failed with two referendums that were intended to modernize wording in the constitution on the role of women in the household and the family.

More than two thirds of those eligible to vote voted against the proposed changes, as the count showed in the evening.

Prime Minister Leo Varadkar had already admitted defeat in the afternoon: “It was our responsibility to convince a majority of people to vote yes and we clearly failed.”

In the Republic of Ireland - on International Women's Day on Friday of all days - people were able to decide on two constitutional changes in a double vote.

The predominantly Catholic country took a similar approach in the past and introduced full marriage equality for homosexual couples.

Voter turnout was 44.4 percent

On the one hand, it was now possible to decide on a definition of family that would also have explicitly included unmarried couples.

67.7 percent (1.02 million) voted against, voter turnout was around 44.4 percent.

An article recognizing the family “as the natural, primary and fundamental unit of society” should have been supplemented with the addition of “Family – regardless of whether it is based on marriage or any other permanent relationship”.

Voter turnout was around 44.4 percent.

© Damien Storan/PA Wire/dpa

On the other hand, wording should be changed in which, for example, women's “domestic duties” are mentioned.

The passage should have been replaced by a gender-neutral wording in which the importance of care work should also be anchored.

73.9 percent voted against (1.1 million votes).

The passage now further states that the state recognizes that “the woman, through her life at home, is a support to the state, without which the common good cannot be achieved.”

The state should work to ensure that mothers are not forced out of economic necessity to work “while neglecting their domestic duties”.

dpa

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2024-03-09

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