Houston Chronicle

President, old anti-blasphemy law on ballot in Ireland

Higgins likely to stay in post; religious rule might get the boot

- By Ed O’Loughlin

DUBLIN — As an academic, poet, intellectu­al, committed socialist and famously pause-averse public speaker, Ireland’s president, Michael D. Higgins, is far from your typical crowd-pleasing candidate.

Yet as voting closed in Ireland’s presidenti­al election last night he was expected to easily win a second term as Ireland’s head of state, taking as many as twice as many votes as the other five candidates combined.

Irish voters also were asked to decide whether to remove a constituti­onal clause banning blasphemy. Having recently approved far more divisive measures allowing same-sex marriage and abortion, they were expected to approve the proposal by a wide margin.

Although no one has ever been prosecuted for blasphemy in modern Ireland, rights groups like Amnesty Internatio­nal say the existence of the ban has been used by government­s like those of Pakistan and Saudi Arabia to argue in support of their own repressive regimes in various internatio­nal forums.

In the lead-up to the vote, even the Roman Catholic Church agreed that the clause was “largely obsolete.”

It might never have been an issue were it not for a 2015 TV appearance by comedian Stephen Fry. Asked about what he would say to God in the afterlife, Fry responded: “Why should I respect a capricious, mean-minded, stupid God who creates a world so full of injustice and pain?”

That prompted both a police investigat­ion that was ultimately dropped and a discussion about removing the clause from the constituti­on.

Although official results are not expected until Saturday, in opinion polls the blasphemy measure was supported by about half the voters while the 77-year-old president was the choice of between 68 and 69 percent of likely voters.

Although personally popular, Higgins also enjoys a huge advantage from his incumbent status.

The Irish presidency is largely a figurehead position, with seldom used constituti­onal powers to break parliament­ary deadlocks and refer new laws for extra scrutiny. Once elected, an Irish president is therefore traditiona­lly seen as above normal politics.

“Most presidents leave office on approval figures that government­s could only dream of,” often in the realm of 90 percent, said Theresa Reidy, a political science lecturer at University College Cork.

Higgins’ campaign was helped by the fact that no major national or public figure chose to run against him.

Sinn Fein, formerly the political wing of the Irish Republican Army, was the only major party that fielded a candidate, Liadh ni Riada, a daughter of the late composer Sean O Riada.

She was at 9 percent in the last poll, 3 points behind secondplac­e Sean Gallagher, one of no less than three “investors” from the TV reality show “Dragon’s Den” to run in this election.

In 2011 Gallagher came close to making the leap from reality show performer to head of state — five years before President Donald Trump — but lost out to Higgins.

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