ER Editor: We’ve included an RT report far below, but also one from Gript.ie, an independent Irish site.
The Irish (that’s Ireland, not Northern Ireland) have overwhelmingly rejected globalist changes to their Constitution which basically remove biological women, i.e. real women, as observers below have commented. From a few activist speeches we’ve seen over the past few months, the Irish get precisely what this trendy, flexible definition of the family means, that women in their biological role and social role get erased.
Here’s a link to what the Irish were being asked to vote on, which lays out the issues very clearly —
What are you being asked to decide on?
On 8 March 2024, Irish citizens will be asked to vote in two referendums to change our Constitution.
The first Referendum concerns the concept of Family in the Constitution
The second Referendum proposes to delete an existing part of the Constitution and insert new text providing recognition for care provided by family members to each other.
You have two separate votes on whether you wish to make the proposed changes to the current text of Article 41 of the Constitution.
The two votes are simply called Family and Care. From the link above, regarding Family —
The Constitution currently recognises the centrality of the family unit in society and protects the Family founded on marriage.
Proposed addition:
Article 41.1.1° “The State recognises the Family, whether founded on marriage or on other durable relationships, as the natural primary and fundamental unit group of Society, and as a moral institution possessing inalienable and imprescriptible rights, antecedent and superior to all positive law.”
And a deletion to existing Constitutional language:
“The State pledges itself to guard with special care the institution of Marriage,
on which the Family is founded,and to protect it against attack.”
Regarding Care (note the language – ‘mothers’ and ‘women’):
The Constitution currently, by Article 41.2, refers to the importance to the common good of the life of women within the home and that the State should endeavour to ensure that mothers should not have to go out to work to the neglect of their “duties in the home”.
Replacement proposal:
“The State recognises that the provision of care, by members of a family to one another by reason of the bonds that exist among them, gives to Society a support without which the common good cannot be achieved, and shall strive to support such provision.”
For readers wishing to get some perspective, we recommend this opinion piece by John McGuirk at Gript.ie —
THE POLITICAL CLASS, NOT THE PUBLIC, “DIDN’T UNDERSTAND” THE REFERENDUMS
If you listen to RTE today, and probably to voices across the rest of the so-called “mainstream” media, you will hear repeatedly that the poor voters just didn’t understand what they were being asked. That, like much of the Government’s campaign, is an utter lie. The truth is that it was the politicians who didn’t understand – why they were having these votes, what the point of them was, or why people had the concerns that they did. We were asked to vote on these proposals because they seemed progressive, and that, as ever, was enough for the crowd of ninnies that this country has the misfortune to call a political class.
#VoteNoNo
#VoteNoNoRef24
A great day for Ireland, for women, for families and for freedom! The people have resoundingly rejected the globalist’s coup 😃 #votenono and #VoteNoNoRef24 happened – the people are awakening!
(thx @AmalekMax for pic!) pic.twitter.com/TUlXM8c3Pa
— Ivor Cummins (@FatEmperor) March 9, 2024
Lesson learned? Don’t come for our Irish Mammies! 💚🇮🇪💪🏻 #NoNoRef24 #Referendum #IrishMammy #VoteNoNo pic.twitter.com/4noRp3xuXu
— Rebecca Barrett (@RebBarrettNP) March 9, 2024
Notice how keeping the family regular, with a biological mother, might prevent transgender excesses in this tweet —
Don’t Let Them ‘Groom our Children’ #VoteNoNo pic.twitter.com/pSaG3J90i7
— Darby O’Gill (@MacConRaoi7) March 4, 2024
Citizens, women and children win.
Globalists and sex degenerates lose.
More of this please.#VoteNoNoRef24 shows the people are awakening!https://t.co/WLGnaar5U8
— Ivor Cummins (@FatEmperor) March 9, 2024
Mother holds a sacred spot in our Constitution. Leave best alone. #VoteNoNo pic.twitter.com/TOYf9KvG8w
— AislingOLoughlin (@AislingOLoughl1) March 5, 2024
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A “Landslide” No No: Ireland Rejects Changes to Family and Women At Home Provisions
GRIPT.IE
“A landslide No” and a “walloping”. The Irish people look to have strongly and decisively rejected both proposals put forward by the government to amend the Constitution to change provisions relating to the family based on marriage and the value of work done by mothers at home.
Senator Sharon Keogan, one of a handful of independent Senators and TDs who had campaigned for a NoNo vote, described the result as a “landslide” – and said the people of Ireland had given the government and opposition a “walloping”.
The people of Ireland have spoken and given this government and the parties in opposition a walloping.
Women do not want to be reduced to non-gender language.
I, for one, did not view the erasure of the words ‘woman or mother’ as something worthy of being progressed. Thankfully… pic.twitter.com/bT41cc9IEI— Senator Sharon Keogan (@SenatorKeogan) March 9, 2024
Speaking at the RDS, Senator Michael McDowell said that the government had misjudged the mood of the electorate and put before them proposals which could have serious consequences.
‘The Government misjudged the mood of the electorate,’ according to Senator Michael McDowell, as tallies from across the country show referendums on the issue of Family and Care look set to be comprehensively defeated | Follow live updates: https://t.co/7ac7kS3wlr pic.twitter.com/76c3GimtO6
— RTÉ News (@rtenews) March 9, 2024
Early tallies showed massive No votes in some areas, with Cherry Orchard in Dublin recording at 95% NO in the Care referendum one box, while in Birr in Co Offaly the tallies suggested a 80% No earlier today, though those are not the final numbers.
Early tallies in the referendum indicate a massive ‘No’ victory, with some areas indicating a ‘No’ vote of over 75%. @Ben_Scallan reports from Dublin Castle: pic.twitter.com/PDJxBDGQtJ
— gript (@griptmedia) March 9, 2024
Tallies coming on from around the country suggest that the final count will show this to be amongst the most decisive referendum losses in the history of the state.
Here in the Waterford count centre covering Waterford City and County, 148 of the c.171 boxes are opened and I think… hesitantly think… it is a no and no. Landslide, absolute landslide no in many boxes. Across all demographics.
— Colette Colfer (@ColetteColfer) March 9, 2024
Both the government and most of the opposition, including Sinn Féin, are scrambling to explain why the electorate rejected the proposals in such huge numbers – but their claim that it was because of voter confusion has been met with sharp criticism.
Labour Party Leadar Ivana Bacik just now at Dublin Castle:
“The reality is most people did want to see a change in Article 41, but what they were unhappy with was the text of the amendment.”#Referendum2024 pic.twitter.com/WOw01nXMfc
— Ben Scallan 🇮🇪 (@Ben_Scallan) March 9, 2024
My initial thoughts on the referendum, with added anger and amusement because I watched 10 minutes of RTE.
Short version: Claims that the public “didn’t understand” are insulting bullshit from a political class that’s deeply out of touch:https://t.co/23cHnU2fRa
— John McGuirk (@john_mcguirk) March 9, 2024
It looks like @sinnfeinireland who went missing in the referendum have spectacularly missed the mood of the country especially in working class areas. In conjunction with their similar disconnect on immigration, they are the party of No Change. That’s an odd strategy to go with…
— Keith Redmond (@ExCllrRedmond) March 9, 2024
Areas such as Dublin Central where all TDs, including opposition Sinn Féin, called for a YesYes vote, look set to reject the proposals decisively, as did most constituencies across the country.
Never been so proud of my fellow voters in Dublin Central, where every single TD (including @MaryLouMcDonald and @Paschald) was in the Yes and Yes camp.#Referendum2024 pic.twitter.com/GA2iya7x0c
— Keith Mills (@KeithMillsD7) March 9, 2024
On X, women said that the proposals – billed by the government as a progressive measure – were defeated because they had sought to “erase women”, and devalue the work of women in the home. Grassroots campaigns said were delighted with the outcome.
Whatever happens today, we want to thank everyone for supporting our #VoteNoNo campaign the last 8 weeks, we especially want to thank our incredible canvassers who spent every weekend out there speaking to people and informing them about the referendums. This was a grassroots… pic.twitter.com/QlikCT5eMo
— The Countess (@TheCountessIE) March 9, 2024
The Natural Women’s Council, LFJI, Irish Education Alliance and Parents Rights Alliance extend our heartfelt gratitude to the people of Ireland for playing a fundamental role in our grassroots #VoteNoNo campaign. Power of the people is stronger than the people in power! pic.twitter.com/ex9W1Ivd8p
— Natural Women’s Council (@Jklunden) March 9, 2024
What a wonderful day for women, mothers and family❤️💕❤️💕 #VoteNoNoRef24 #MothersDay pic.twitter.com/W62skHLkP3
— Nurses & Midwives 4Life Ireland (@Nurses4lifeIrl) March 9, 2024
There was also widespread anger at taxpayer-funded bodies, such as the National Women’s Council of Ireland for their YesYes stance – with commentators saying that they felt it was now clear they do not represent women.
No. And they never will. But at least now it’s clear. They don’t represent women, they represent nothing, a government puppet, a woke talking shop, and a BETRAYAL of the women of Ireland. https://t.co/zC76J8ec9W
— Sarah Ryan (@sarahcatryan) March 9, 2024
A ‘Yes’ vote was supported by:
– All three government parties
– Almost all opposition parties
– The €6bn-a-year NGO sectorAnd with the exception of a couple of rogue Independents, poorly-resourced street activists and Aontú’s Peadar Toibín, there was basically no ‘No’…
— Ben Scallan 🇮🇪 (@Ben_Scallan) March 9, 2024
With immigration, taxation, inheritance, family structure and women’s rights under discussion in the debate, the stunning scale of the loss will be seen as a significant setback for the government and may be viewed as a vote against the establishment.
When you consider the No No campaign had
1) No money
2) Very little media support
3) practically no balanced debate
4) Only a handful of politicians onside!This is looking like a landslide victory for us, well done to each and every person who had the courage to speak up!
— Elaine Mullally ☘️ (@_mullally_el_) March 9, 2024
Peadar Tóibín of Aontú called for a no confidence vote in Minister Roderic O’Gorman, claiming that he had “misled” voters ahead of the March 8th referenda.
Aontú’s Peadar Toibín says the projected defeat of the Yes campaign in #Referendum2024 is a rejection of the Government, & that the referendum was about politicians “virtue signalling.”
He also called for a no confidence vote in Roderic O’Gorman, saying he “misled” the public. pic.twitter.com/d8XdYPd38z
— gript (@griptmedia) March 9, 2024
Other smaller parties such as the Irish Freedom Party also welcomed the NO NO vote.
A great day for the Irish people and #Irishfreedom. The entire political establishment engulfed with groupthink supported YES/YES. We have given them a beating today that they will never forget. #NONO #Referendum2024 pic.twitter.com/kuBYExW64P
— Irish Freedom Party (@IrexitFreedom) March 9, 2024
Eamon Ryan of the Green Party said that if it was a No vote, that was the voice of the people, and the people were sovereign, and the vote would have to be respected.
‘We will have to wait until the final count has been done, but if it is a No vote in both we will have to respect that,’ Minister Eamon Ryan has said | Follow live updates https://t.co/7ac7kS3wlr pic.twitter.com/xFn1qaytpp
— RTÉ News (@rtenews) March 9, 2024
Senator Rónán Mullen, who campaigned for a NoNo Vote said “today’s resounding reaffirmation of family life, marriage and the role of mothers, and the rejection of NGO-sponsored groupthink means the Government should press the pause button on its culture war policies”, including its “controversial hate speech legislation”.
Source
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Ireland votes to keep ‘sexist’ language in the constitution
The voters rejected the proposal to expand the definition of families and the role of women
RT
Irish voters have overwhelmingly rejected the proposal to revise the definition of families in the country’s conservative constitution and remove the mention of women’s “duties in the home.”
Both the government and opposition parties have argued that the current text contains old-fashioned and sexist language about women and their role in society.
The referendum on the matter was held on Friday, which was timed to coincide with the International Women’s Day.
The voters were offered an option to expand the constitutional protection of families to include those founded on “durable relationships” other than marriage. They were also offered to remove the clause about the state’s duty to “ensure that mothers shall not be obliged by economic necessity to engage in labor to the neglect of their duties in the home.”
According to the official results released late on Saturday, 67.7% voted against redefining the family, while nearly 74% rejected the removal of the “duties in the home” clause.
“I think it’s clear at this stage that the family amendment and the care amendment referendums have been defeated,” Prime Minister Leo Varadkar said at a press conference in Dublin on Saturday, admitting that the authorities had failed to convince the majority of the public.
He previously argued that the ‘no’ vote would be “a step backwards” for women’s rights and criticized “the very old-fashioned language, very sexy language” of the constitution.
Deputy Prime Minister Micheal Martin voiced his frustration with the results as well, but stressed that the cabinet “fully respects” them.
According to the Irish media, the vague wording of the amendments, problems with messaging and lackluster campaigning were among the reasons why the people voted ‘no’.
Adopted in 1937, Ireland’s constitution has been strongly influenced by the Catholic Church and reflects conservative views on social issues. In the last decade, however, the country legalized same-sex marriages and repealed a near-total abortion ban.
Source
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