National Post

‘CLEARLY WE GOT IT WRONG’: IRISH PM

Gender equity wording rejected in referendum

- Michael Kealy and Brian Melley

DUBLIN • Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar conceded defeat Saturday as two constituti­onal amendments he supported that would have broadened the definition of family and removed language about a woman’s role in the home were headed toward rejection.

Varadkar, who pushed the vote to enshrine gender equality in the constituti­on by removing “very old-fashioned language” and tried to recognize the realities of modern family life, said that voters had delivered “two wallops” to the government.

“Clearly we got it wrong,” he said. “While the old adage is that success has many fathers and failure is an orphan, I think when you lose by this kind of margin, there are a lot of people who got this wrong and I am certainly one of them.”

Opponents argued that the amendments were poorly worded, and voters said they were confused with the choices that some feared would lead to unintended consequenc­es.

The referendum was viewed as part of Ireland’s evolution from a conservati­ve, overwhelmi­ngly Roman Catholic country in which divorce and abortion were illegal, to an increasing­ly diverse and socially liberal society. The proportion of residents who are Catholic fell from 94.9 per cent in 1961 to 69 per cent in 2022, according to the Central Statistics Office.

The social transforma­tion has been reflected in a series of changes to the Irish Constituti­on, which dates from 1937, though the country wasn’t formally known as the Republic of Ireland until 1949. Irish voters legalized divorce in a 1995 referendum, backed same-sex marriage in a 2015 vote and repealed a ban on abortions in 2018.

The first question dealt with a part of the constituti­on that pledges to protect the family as the primary unit of society. Voters were asked to remove a reference to marriage as the basis “on which the family is founded” and replace it with a clause that said families can be founded “on marriage or on other durable relationsh­ips.” If passed, it would have been the constituti­on’s 39th amendment.

A proposed 40th amendment would have removed a reference that a woman’s place in the home offered a common good that couldn’t be provided by the state, and delete a statement that said mothers shouldn’t be obligated to work out of economic necessity if it would neglect their duties at home. It would have added a clause saying the state will strive to support “the provision of care by members of a family to one another.”

Siobhan Mullally, a law professor and director of the Irish Center for Human Rights at the University of Galway, said that it was patronizin­g for Varadkar to schedule the vote on Internatio­nal Women’s Day thinking people would use the occasion to strike the language about women in the home. The so-called care amendment wasn’t that simple.

While voters support removing the outdated notion of a woman’s place in the home, they also wanted new language recognizin­g state support of family care provided by those who aren’t kin, she said. Some disability rights and social justice advocates opposed the measure because it was too restrictiv­e in that regard.

“It was a hugely missed opportunit­y,” Mullally said. “Most people certainly want that sexist language removed from the constituti­on. There’s been calls for that for years and it’s taken so long to have a referendum on it. But they proposed replacing it with this very limited, weak provision on care.”

Varadkar said that his camp hadn’t convinced people of the need for the vote — never mind issues over how the questions were worded. Supporters of the amendment and opponents said the government had failed to explain why change was necessary or mount a robust campaign.

“The government misjudged the mood of the electorate and put before them proposals which they didn’t explain and proposals which could have serious consequenc­es,” Sen. Michael Mcdowell, an independen­t who opposed both measures, told Irish broadcaste­r RTE.

Labour party Leader Ivana Bacik told RTE that she supported the measures, despite concerns over their wording, but said the government had run a lacklustre campaign.

 ?? ?? Leo Varadkar
Leo Varadkar

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