Ireland on Friday voted by an overwhelming majority to relax its constitutional restriction on divorce, results showed yesterday, the latest in a series of reforms to modernize the charter of the once devoutly Catholic nation.
About 82 percent of voters cast their ballots in favor of removing a provision requiring couples to live separately for four out of the previous five years before dissolving their marriage.
The Irish government has signaled it would bring forward new legislation shortening the requirement to two out of the prior three years.
Irish divorce law is regarded as among the most restrictive in Europe.
It is thought to be responsible for the republic having the lowest separation rate of any EU member state, according to 2015 figures from the Irish Central Statistics Office.
The outcome of the referendum would also see Irish lawmakers granted powers to recognize foreign divorces once it is signed into law by the president.
The mandated separation period was a hangover condition from the 1995 referendum, which granted Irish couples the right to divorce by a slim majority of 50.3 percent.
Campaigners said that it placed an unfair emotional and financial burden on couples and families at a time when Irish rental and property prices are spiking.
The result came one year on from the day when 66 percent of voters cast referendum ballots in favor of repealing the country’s constitutional ban on abortion.
While the result of that vote was hailed by crowds in jubilant scenes in Dublin Castle, yesterday’s result was announced without fanfare.
In October last year, voters also chose to lift a rarely enforced — and oft ridiculed — constitutional ban on blasphemy.
A further referendum to excise or alter the constitutional article referring to the “woman’s life within the home” is expected to be brought forward soon.
The turnout in the referendum, which took place alongside EU elections, was 51 percent.
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