GeneralA Guide To 'Repeal The 8th'

A Guide To ‘Repeal The 8th’

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by Ruth Foster 

Last week, the Republic of Ireland took to the polls to vote to change part of the country’s constitution, which effectively outlawed abortion. The Republic of Ireland voted overwhelmingly to overturn this abortion ban by 66.4% to 33.6% after what the taoiseach (Prime Minister) Leo Varadkar described as a “quiet revolution” and a “great act of democracy”. However this historic referendum has led to misinformation and confusion surrounding the nature of the law banning abortion in the Republic of Ireland and the future for women in Northern Ireland, which will soon be the only part of either the UK or Ireland where abortion is illegal unless there is a serious risk to a woman’s life or health. Here are some key questions surrounding the referendum in the Republic of Ireland, answered:

 

What was the law in the Republic of Ireland?

The 8th Amendment of the Irish Constitution was voted into the Constitution of the Republic of Ireland in 1983. It effectively made abortion illegal by equating the life of the woman with the life of the unborn, thus banning abortion even where the pregnancy places a woman’s life at serious risk, in cases of rape or incest, or cases of FFA (fatal foetal abnormalities). The amendment reads as follows:

“The State acknowledges the right to life of the unborn and, with due regard to the equal right to life of the mother, guarantees in its laws to respect, and, as far as practicable, by its laws to defend and vindicate that right.”

 

What happened when an Irish woman needed an abortion?

Due to the constitutional ban on abortion, women who wished to terminate their pregnancy for whatever reason were expected to go to full term. Those who had the money to do so travelled to Great Britain in order to access legal but privately-funded abortions. According to the Marie Stopes UK, every year approximately 4000 women from the Republic of Ireland or Northern Ireland travel to Britain to have an abortion. Many women who have not been able to afford to travel to Britain have attempted to access abortion care illegally by ordering abortion pills online. According to Together for Yes, the national Irish campaign to remove the eighth amendment, in doing this these women have risked up to 14 years in prison.

 

What was the referendum?

The referendum on repealing the 8th Amendment to the Irish Constitution was called after the Irish Citizens’ Assembly voted to recommend the introduction of unrestricted access to abortion in 2017. The referendum was held on the 25th of May 2018.

 

Who could vote in this referendum?

Only those who could physically cast their ballot within the Republic of Ireland and had lived away from the Republic of Ireland for less than 18 months were entitled to take part in the referendum. This means that people in Northern Ireland could not vote, and those who lived away from the Republic of Ireland travelled back to cast their vote, prompting the #HomeToVote to trend on social media.

 

What was on the ballot paper?

The referendum asked voters if they wanted to approve the 36th Amendment to the Constitution, thus removing the 8th Amendment and inserting a provision in its place that “may be made by law for the regulation of the termination of pregnancies”.

 

What happens next?

In the Republic of Ireland, the current legislation will remain in place until the laws are changed through Ireland’s Parliament. It is expected that abortion will be provided within a restricted time period of up to 12 weeks through the public healthcare system – fulfilling the ‘yes’ campaign’s call for free, safe, and legal abortions.

 

What about Northern Ireland?

All eyes are now on Northern Ireland and its strict abortion restrictions, with the wounds of over 18 months without a devolved government at Stormont being laid bare for the world to see. Northern Irish pro-choice activists are calling on Westminster to act, despite liberal politicians and activists in Britain calling for a non-binding referendum in Northern Ireland concerning the extension of the 1967 Abortion Act. What is important to remember is that the campaign to legalise abortion across the island of Ireland is not a new issue or a new campaign. Now that a grassroots feminist movement in the Republic of Ireland has succeeded in its objective, momentum is only building to ensure that similar movements are taken seriously in Northern Ireland.

The victory for women’s rights in Ireland is no small one, we just hope that Northern Ireland follows suite.

 

Ruth is a final year undergraduate student at the University of Edinburgh, originally from Northern Ireland. Her aim in life is to try and make the world a little bit better and care about the right things, which includes (but is in no way limited to) storytelling, politics, culture, and coffee.

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