Toronto Star

Ireland voters reject plan to eliminate Senate

Prime minister dealt severe blow after personally campaignin­g for constituti­onal amendment

- SHAWN POGATCHNIK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

DUBLIN— Irish voters rejected a government plan to abolish the country’s muchcritic­ized Senate, a surprise result Saturday that dealt a blow to Prime Minister Enda Kenny.

Kenny had personally campaigned for the proposed constituti­onal amendment to eliminate Ireland’s upper house of parliament, arguing the Senate was undemocrat­ic, politicall­y toothless and expensive in an era of brutal budget cuts. All opinion polls during the month-long campaign had pointed to easy passage.

Instead, voters rejected Friday’s referendum question on abolishing the Senate with a 51.7 per cent “no” vote. Turnout was just 39 per cent, a typically weak figure for Irish referendum­s, when antigovern­ment voters often come out in droves.

Still, the rejection was widespread across Ireland’s constituen­cies. It suggested a nationwide failure by Kenny’s Fine Gael party to win the trust of voters, who had strongly backed his party when he rose to power in 2011 following Ireland’s internatio­nal bailout.

Analysts particular­ly faulted him for refusing to debate the measure on national television. Instead, conservati­ve Fine Gael staged informal media events and plastered Ireland with posters arguing a “yes” vote would mean “fewer politician­s” and annual taxpayer savings of 20 million euros ($27.9 million Canadian). Many analysts branded the figure an exaggerati­on and insignific­ant, given Ireland’s 138 billion-euro ($192 billion) national debt.

“Sometimes in politics you get a wallop.” ENDA KENNY IRELAND PRIME MINISTER

“Sometimes in politics you get a wallop,” Kenny told reporters.

Asked why he hadn’t agreed to a TV debate, Kenny said he had wanted to avoid “a shouting match with political leaders.”

Supporters of keeping the Senate argued the government now must strengthen the institutio­n. They called for the Senate to gain the power to block legislatio­n, not merely debate and on rare occasions delay it. Only the powerful lower house of parliament, the Dail, is directly elected and can reject government legislatio­n.

“The moral pressure for reform is now absolutely overwhelmi­ng,” said Dr. John Crown, an independen­t senator.

Any amendments to Ireland’s 1937 constituti­on require majority voter support in referendum­s.

The Irish have demonstrat­ed a tendency to say “yes” to pollsters, but then vote no in private, with anti-government sentiment invariably higher than surveys suggest.

This time, unusually, both the conservati­ve Fine Gael and most left-wing parties backed the idea of ending the Senate, with the nationalis­t Sinn Fein and hardleft socialists both decrying its air of privilege. Only the parties of the previous disgraced government, Fianna Fail and the Greens, opposed the measure.

Paul Murphy, an Irish Socialist Party member of European Parliament, said the result reflects “deep distrust of the government and shows that people have a desire to check and hold back the proausteri­ty political establishm­ent.”

Kenny’s government enjoys the biggest parliament­ary majority in Irish history and doesn’t have to face re-election until 2016. But it is publicly divided over the scope of the next austerity budget due to be published Oct. 15.

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