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Ireland's Constitution says a woman's place is in the home, voters being asked to change that

Published:Friday | March 8, 2024 | 8:37 AM
A woman votes in a referendum on the proposed changes to the wording of the Constitution relating to the areas of family and care, at Old St Joseph's Gym Hall, in Dublin, Ireland, Friday, March 8, 2024. As the world marks International Women's Day, in Ireland, voters are deciding on Friday whether to change the constitution to remove passages referring to women’s domestic duties and broadening the definition of the family. (Gareth Chaney/PA via AP)

DUBLIN (AP) —Irish voters will decide Friday, International Women's Day, whether to change Ireland's 87-year-old Constitution to remove passages that say a woman's place is in the home.

The twin referendums are on deleting a reference to women's domestic duties and broadening the definition of the family.

The first vote deals with a part of the constitution that pledges to protect the family as the primary unit of society. Voters are being asked to remove a reference to marriage as the basis "on which the family is founded" and replace it with a clause that says families can be founded "on marriage or on other durable relationships." If passed, it will be the 39th amendment to Ireland's Constitution.

The second change — a proposed 40th amendment — would remove a reference to women's role in the home as a key support to the state, and delete a statement that "mothers shall not be obliged by economic necessity to engage in labour to the neglect of their duties in the home." It would add a clause saying the state will strive to support "the provision of care by members of a family to one another."

Ireland's Constitution dates from 1937, when the country became a republic. Ireland has changed enormously since then, transforming 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 constitutional changes. Irish voters legalised divorce in a 1995 referendum, backed same-sex marriage in a 2015 vote and repealed a ban on abortions in 2018.

Prime Minister Leo Varadkar announced a year ago, on International Women's Day 2023, that the government would hold a referendum to enshrine gender equality and remove discriminatory language from the constitution. The new votes are about removing "very old-fashioned language" and recognising the realities of modern family life, said Varadkar, Ireland's first ethnic minority leader, who is in a same-sex relationship but not married.

Opinion polls suggest support for the "yes" side on both votes, but many voters remain undecided, and turnout may be low.

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