Posted on 02/13/2002 10:42:33 AM PST by Jeremy_Bentham
Yet another plebiscite on abortion looms in Ireland
FEW issues have so dominated public debate in Ireland, or proved so divisive, as abortion. The weary Irish electorate has endured four plebiscites on the subject in 20 years. In the next few weeks they will face a fifth, intended to tighten already restrictive abortion laws even further.
Last year an estimated 7,000 Irish women travelled abroad, mainly to England, to end unwanted pregnancies. At home, abortion is illegal on all except the narrowest of grounds: where the life of a pregnant mother is threatened because she is suicidal. The entitlement has hardly ever been invokedonly once since 1992, when the Irish courts first established it, in the case of a teenage rape victim. The constitutional referendum is on whether to remove even this limited right.
The campaign is led by Bertie Ahern, the prime minister. A conservative on social issues himself, his coalition government has relied for its parliamentary majority on four independents. Part of the price for their support has been a further referendum on abortion, which Mr Ahern regards as unfinished business.
The referendum, if passed, would repeal the 1992 Supreme Court ruling. But, to the dismay of some anti-abortion campaigners, that change would give a higher priority to the mother's life if she is in danger (other than from a suicide threat) than to a fetus's right to life.
Since his election as prime minister in 1997, Mr Ahern has tried to build a consensus for change in this area. But with a general election expected in May, unity is slowly fracturing. His coalition partners remain lukewarm about the proposals, the opposition parties reject them, and divisions have emerged within the anti-abortion movement. This recalls 1992, when a broadly similar anti-abortion measure also created political rifts. Then, an alliance of conservatives and liberalsfor different reasonsopposed change and defeated the constitutional amendment by a two-to-one margin.
For Mr Ahern, the referendum is a big gamble. A win would check what he sees as a steady slide towards freely available social abortion in Ireland. A defeat, however, would only serve to speed that process up. Moreover, a second referendum loss, following the public's rejection of the EU's Nice treaty last year, would be a very bad start to the unofficial election campaign already under way.
For many conservatives this ammendment is a hard pill to swallow because it would dilute the view that life commences at conception and ends at death. However, Ireland is becoming increasingly 'liberal' and we might just have to be practical about it and accept that this is the best we're going to get.
Hard to say whether or not the ammendment will pass. I haven't seen any polls on how we intend to vote on the referendum. (Too busy reading FreeRepublic - May I recommend Mark Steyn to you all).
"A nation that kills its children is a nation without hope." pope John Paul II
My fellow Irishmen, "Be fruitful and multiply" -- you'll own all of Europe including Great Britain in as little as 50 years-- as all those countries are far below replacement level births!!
Let the Irish be the leaders and once again save our Western Civilization.
Shalom.
Yes, of course. That explains why the screen was going gray. I thought it was a problem in my display driver.
Shalom.
We never will, more's the pity. And with 29 years of Roe v. Wade under our belt, we've lost the future. Too many young folks think that it is their right to be promiscuous and to flush any inconvenient children. It is truly shameful. And it has created a couple of generations of selfish and irresponsible people. It is so sad that we now have more abortions than live birthsin some states (perhaps all states). Shameful.
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