The Jerusalem Post

Campaigner­s make final pitches on eve of Ireland’s abortion referendum

- • By PADRAIC HALPIN and GRAHAM FAHY

DUBLIN (Reuters) – The rival sides in Ireland’s decades-old battle over abortion made their final pitches to voters on Thursday, the eve of a referendum on liberalizi­ng one of the world’s strictest bans on terminatio­ns.

Voters in the once deeply Catholic nation will be asked on Friday if they wish to scrap a prohibitio­n that was enshrined in the constituti­on by referendum 35 year ago, then partly lifted five years ago for cases where the mother’s life is in danger.

Opinion polls have put those who favor changing the law in the lead. The two most recent surveys on Sunday showed the “Yes” side pulling slightly further ahead.

“This is a once-in-a-generation decision for the Irish people,” Prime Minister Leo Varadkar told reporters.

“It is an opportunit­y for us to change our country. If there is a ‘Yes’ vote, Ireland will still be the same place, just a place that is a little bit more compassion­ate, a little kinder and a little more understand­ing than it has been.”

“Yes” campaigner­s are urging voters to repeal the eighth amendment of the constituti­on, which equates the right to life of the mother with her unborn child’s.

They argue that with over 3,000 women traveling to Britain each year for terminatio­ns and others ordering pills illegally online, abortion is already a reality in Ireland.

The “No” camp has seized on government plans to allow terminatio­ns with no restrictio­n up to 12 weeks into a pregnancy if the referendum is carried, although that is not on the ballot paper.

They have suggested in recent days that if the referendum is defeated, the constituti­on could instead be amended again to allow for abortions in “hard” cases such as rape, incest and fatal fetal abnormalit­y.

Varadkar and others say this is impossible – citing advice from Ireland’s attorney-general – and have accused their opponents of trying to dupe voters.

“If we... vote ‘No,’ no doubt this will come back in a year or two and then we can look at the hard cases, but not a carte blanche free-for-all for up to 12 weeks,” said Mattie McGrath, an independen­t lawmaker and prominent anti-abortion campaigner.

“If ‘No’ carries, the people will have spoken.”

Home to vote

Most polls will open at 6:00 GMT on Friday, although voting was already underway on Thursday on remote west coast islands.

Some expatriate Irish were flying home from as far as way as Bangkok, Los Angeles and Sydney to cast their ballots in a country that does not allow those abroad to vote via post or in embassies.

Those away for less than 18 months remain eligible to vote at their former local polling station.

The hashtag #hometovote was one of the top trending issues on Twitter on Wednesday, as it was three years ago when Ireland became the first country in the world to adopt gay marriage by popular vote.

Online comments suggested most of those heading home planned to vote “Yes.” Many posted photos of themselves wearing sweatshirt­s bearing the “Yes” side’s “Repeal” slogan.

“For me, I felt a moral obligation to come back,” said Ciaran Gaffney, 22, who forked out nearly €1,000 to return to the southweste­rn city of Limerick from Buenos Aires and bumped into four other returning voters on his flight home.

“As soon as the referendum was called, I just booked the flights there and then. My generation, my peers, are the ones who are going to be affected. I’m extremely excited to go into the polling booth and put that ‘X’ into the Ta (Yes) box.”

 ?? (Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters) ?? PRESIDING OFFICER Carmel McBride and Garda Alan Gallagher carry the polling box yesterday for the referendum on liberalizi­ng abortion law a day early onto the Donegal coastal island of Inishbofin.
(Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters) PRESIDING OFFICER Carmel McBride and Garda Alan Gallagher carry the polling box yesterday for the referendum on liberalizi­ng abortion law a day early onto the Donegal coastal island of Inishbofin.

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