Jamaica Gleaner

Irish back gay marriage

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DUBLIN (AP): RISH VOTERS have resounding­ly backed amending the constituti­on to legalise gay marriage, leaders on both sides of the Irish referendum declared yesterday after the world’s first national vote on the issue.

Gay couples hugged and kissed each other amid scenes of jubilation at counting centres and at the official results centre in Dublin Castle, whose cobbleston­ed cen-

Itral square was opened so thousands of revellers could sit in the sunshine and watch the results live on big-screen television­s. “We’re the first country in the world to enshrine marriage equality in our constituti­on and do so by popular mandate. That makes us a beacon, a light to the rest of the world, of liberty and equality. So it’s a very proud day to be Irish,” said Leo Varadkar, a Cabinet minister who came out as gay at the start of a government­led effort to amend Ireland’s conservati­ve Catholic constituti­on.

“People from the LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r) community in Ireland are a minority. But with our parents, our families, or friends and coworkers and colleagues, we’re a majority,” said Varadkar, who watched the votes being tabulated at the County Dublin ballot centre.

“For me, it wasn’t just a referendum. It was more like a social revolution,” he said.

Political analysts who have covered Irish referendum­s for decades agreed that yesterday’s landslide marked a stunning generation­al shift from the 1980s, when voters firmly backed Catholic Church teachings and overwhelmi­ngly voted against abortion and divorce.

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