The Province

Ireland to vote on repealing abortion law

- JAMES ROTHWELL

DUBLIN — Nearly 40,000 Irish citizens have been urged to return home to vote in a referendum on repealing the country’s tough abortion laws, in the hope of tipping the odds in favour of reform.

According to the latest polls, 56 per cent of the country will vote Friday to repeal Ireland’s eighth amendment, which allows abortions only in cases where the mother’s life is at risk, while 27 per cent oppose reform, and around one in seven are undecided.

One poll on Sunday suggested that support for repeal was growing, in an apparent reversal of a recent trend that suggested the result would be too close to call.

Ireland’s cohort of workers in the EU and beyond are flocking back to the emerald isle to cast their vote in what many regard as a long overdue vote on women’s rights.

Erica, a 25-year-old from County Kildare who lives and works in Brussels, said: “Voting Yes will allow more compassion­ate legislatio­n so that women can choose what is right for them.”

Blaithin Carroll, 21, who works in London, said she would vote Yes in support of her grandmothe­r, who was forced to carry her pregnancy to term despite suffering from a fatal fetal abnormalit­y.

“She should not have had this experience, and over 50 years later, women of Ireland should not be having this experience,” she said.

Not everyone who is coming home plans to vote Yes, however. The group Love Both, for example, is also calling on young conservati­ve voters to return to Ireland and cast their vote for No.

“I think babies deserve the right to life and deserve protection just like everybody else, and I don’t think this is the best thing for women,” said Rebecca, a pro-life voter flying back to Dublin from London, in a No campaign video.

The Catholic Church has also strongly opposed repealing the eighth amendment.

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