Ireland expected the higher-than-usual voter turnout to continue into the evening on Friday as Irish citizens headed to ballot boxes in droves and women living abroad returned to their home country to weigh in on a measure that would repeal the Eight Amendement of the Irish Constitution, which bans abortion unless a pregnant woman’s life is at risk.
Reproductive rights advocates have created the pro-choice Together for Yes campaign to repeal the amendment, which grants equal rights to women and fetuses, and was added to the constitution in 1983. Votes will be counted beginning Saturday morning, with an announcement expected during the afternoon.
Some Irish citizens have framed the debate as “the most contentious social issue that we have had since independence,” with pro-choice and anti-choice campaigners—many with ties to the Catholic church, which has a strong influence over the country’s citizens—frequently canvassing with pamphlets and marching in the streets over the past almost three decades.
Reproductive rights advocates have long condemend the culture of shame that the amendment has fostered and sought to draw attention to women who have died due to medical complications or taking their own lives after being denied abortions—even in cases of rape and incest—despite the fact that women who are suicidal are supposed to be able to terminate a pregnancy.
“If we don’t remove the (Eighth) Amendment from the constitution our doctors and lawmakers can’t do anything for women. They can’t do anything for women who have been raped, who are children themselves, or who have been given the heartbreaking news of fatal fetal abnormality,” Prime Minister Leo Varadkar said Friday as voting started, according to USA Today. “If the referendum doesn’t pass these women will continue to have to travel abroad in their thousands.”
If the repeal effort is successful, the government has vowed to introduce legislation later this year to establish the circumstances under which Irish women may pursue the procedure. Ahead of the vote, women have come forward to share their stories about unplanned pregnancies and their limited options for medical in their country. Methods for accessing abortions have included traveling abroad for the procedure and importing pills ordered online.
SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT