
On this day in 1995, the Irish people voted to legalize divorce in a close-run referendum, the final result being 50.28% for and 49.72% against

On this day in 1995, the Irish people voted to legalize divorce in a close-run referendum, the final result being 50.28% for and 49.72% against
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[Context](https://www.thejournal.ie/divorce-referendum-1995-4640050-May2019/?amp=1)
THE REFERENDUM TO introduce divorce into this country was passed by just 9,114 votes.
Fewer than 10,000 votes out of 1,633,942 votes cast, a margin of 50.28% to 49.72%.
The razor-thin result brought an end to a fraught campaign that is a long way from the current one which has barely got a mention as voting day approaches.
This is understandable given the change being relatively minor compared to the one 24 years ago.
Despite this, it is worth remembering that the 1995 vote only came about as a result of a number of other significant changes in the years beforehand.
Divorce was strongly rejected by the Irish electorate in 1986 but in the intervening years judicial separations became more common and marital breakdown was a reality.
Judicial separation allowed couples to separate and provided a legal basis for arrangements such as child custody, access and maintenance.
Laws around property rights for separated couples had also been introduced, undercutting one of the primary arguments from the referendum nine years previous.
Crucially though, separated couples remained legally married and as a result could not remarry.
“To continue to deny such a right, would represent a grave injustice to many of thousands of individuals, ” Tánaiste and Labour leader Dick Spring said while announcing the referendum.
Aside from the personal and social toll proponents of a change pointed to, Ireland’s lack of divorce made the country an international outlier and there was significant political will to hold another referendum.
The Fianna Fáil/Labour government that came to power in 1993 pledged to do so and this was taken up by the Fine Gael-led ‘rainbow coalition’ that took over the following year.
The wording of the amendment put to the people did introduce divorce, but it did so with several requirements that were restrictive even by the European standards of the day. The requirement that couples be separated for four out of the previous five years particularly so, and this is what we are voting to remove on Friday.
In addition, the amendment laid down that there must be “no reasonable prospect of reconciliation between the spouses” and that “proper financial provision for spouses and dependent children” must be made.
Those two requirements will be unaffected if this week’s vote passes.
1995 campaign
Despite all the major parties pushing for a Yes vote in the 1995 referendum, the campaign against it pushed ahead with perhaps some of the most memorable sloganeering in Irish political history.
The claim that introducing divorce would lead to a culture of marital breakdown was summed up by the famous ‘Hello Divorce… Bye Bye Daddy…’ poster campaign.
The Catholic church also ramped up the rhetoric in opposition by saying that couples who divorced and sought to live with another partner could not receive communion.
“They may not remarry in church and while they live together they may not receive the other sacraments, ” church spokesperson Dr Thomas Flynn said at the time.
Public support for the amendment had seemed assured ahead of the campaign but the race tightened to the toss-up seen on the day of the ballot.
The county-by-county breakdown of the results demonstrated a strong divide.
Dublin, Kildare, Louth and Wicklow voted Yes while the rest of the country voted No, save for only two exceptions.
Did that bilboard say Yes, we want divorce or Yes, we don’t want divorce?
1995 seems incredibly late
What would the poll say, if it was conducted today?
Why the fuck do people still think democracy is a good thing?
how moron you need to be, to think that forbidding divorce can be good for that daughter ? in which case could it be a good idea?
– Hey mom, I know dad fucks the neighbour, gets drunk and then hits you AF, but, cmon, give me a second chance! I really enjoy watching it every evening, bitch!
I’m surprised you didn’t lead with the poster in this article: [Hello Divorce, Bye Bye Daddy](https://www.thejournal.ie/divorce-referendum-1995-4640050-May2019/?amp=1)
Such a classy campaign
The EU really dragged Ireland kicking and screaming into the modern world
If Fine Gael we’re in favour of divorce and they are seen as our most right wing party, then who opposed it and how was the outcome so close?
Yeah sure, if you will go strictly by the “until death do us apart”… But even the most faithful practitioner would find a way out if he wanted. My mind wanders to a case in my neighborhood where a criminal drove over a woman and her infant with his car. That woman’s husband was the ultimate good Christian, in media. One year later, when that woman was nothing but a living vegetable, he was a divorced single and not even mad at the perpetrator. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
But on to the topic – 1995? Yikes. Feels like Ireland lived in another dimension, heh.
Unbelievable it took so long and that it was so incredibly close even then. This is what religious idiocy does to a society.
Ireland – the Saudi Arabia of Europe… Followed closely by Poland…
20 years from legalizing divorce to gay marriage. Thats a pretty fast progression
Let it not be forgotten that Mother Theresa was flown in to campaign for a no vote and then went on to wish her friend Diana happiness after her own divorce shortly after. Ireland is so much better now it’s unshackling itself from religion.