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Ireland votes ‘Yes’ to same-sex marriage

Ireland has voted in favour of allowing same-sex marriage in a historic referendum, making the largely Catholic country the world’s first to make the change after a popular vote.

With ballots in 40 out of 43 constituencies counted, official figures showed the “Yes” vote was ahead with 62.3 per cent, and public broadcaster RTE said the result from the ongoing count was now certain.

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Hundreds of “Yes” supporters gathered in the grounds of Dublin Castle and cheered and waved rainbow flags as the results came through.

“It’s an amazing day to be Irish,” Rory O’Neill, also known as Ireland’s foremost drag queen Panti Bliss and a leading “Yes” campaigner, said as she arrived at the party wearing a figure-hugging dress and high heels.

Outside the main counting centre in Dublin, Grainne O’Grady, 44, and Pauline Tracey, 53, said the plan was to “celebrate, celebrate, celebrate”.

“I’m just so happy I could burst. We were voting on whether we were equal in our own country,” Ms O’Grady said, wearing a “Yes Equality” T-shirt.

Legalising gay marriage is a seismic change in Ireland, where the church remains a powerful force.

Homosexuality was illegal until 1993 and divorce until 1996, and abortion is banned except where the mother’s life is in danger.

Overwhelming Yes vote for gay marriage in Ireland

The ‘Yes’ vote is celebrated outside Dublin Castle.

Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin, Ireland’s top Catholic leader, said the church now needed a “reality check”.

He had called for a “No” vote arguing that gay rights should be respected “without changing the definition of marriage”.

“I think the church needs to do a reality check right across the board … have we drifted away completely from young people?” he said.

“It’s a social revolution that didn’t begin today.”

Health minister Leo Varadkar, who became Ireland’s first openly gay cabinet minister when he came out this year and is tipped as a future leader, also said the “Yes” campaign had been a “social revolution”.

“We’re the first country in the world to vote for marriage equality by popular vote and to enshrine it in our constitution,” he said.

The referendum has pitched traditionalists including the Catholic Church against those in favour of gay marriage, including Irish prime minister Enda Kenny.

Mr Kenny is a Catholic who told voters there was “nothing to fear” in a televised message on Wednesday night.

All Ireland’s main political parties supported amending the constitutional definition of marriage.

A string of Irish celebrities have also backed the “Yes” campaign including singers Bono and Sinead O’Connor, and actor Colin Farrell.

The Catholic Church campaigned strongly for a “No” vote, insisting marriage can only involve a man and woman, drawing support from many older voters.

The majority of Irish people identify themselves as Catholic, but the church’s influence has waned in recent years amid growing secularisation and after a wave of child sex abuse scandals.

Around 3.2 million people were eligible to vote in Friday’s referendum, and the national turnout was relatively high at over 60 per cent.

Historic night brings out raw emotions

The issue has drawn intense interest on social media under the hashtag #MarRef and was the second most popular trending subject on Twitter on Saturday.

Many young Irish voters had been posting selfies of themselves returning from overseas by plane and ferry to vote in favour of gay marriage.

Ireland will be the 19th country in the world to legalise gay marriage, and the 14th in Europe.

Parliament first has to pass specific legislation and is expected to draw up the bill this week.

The first same-sex weddings could then take place in Ireland towards the end of the year.

Across the border in Northern Ireland, gay marriage is banned even though it is legal in the rest of the United Kingdom.

The historic shift brought up raw emotions at the gathering in Dublin Castle, the former centre of British power in Ireland.

Supporters for same-sex marriage hold an inflatable Yes sign as they wait for the announcement on the referendum in Dublin castle

Supporters for same-sex marriage wait for the announcement on the referendum in Dublin castle.

Karen Brady, 27, said she had flown home to Ireland from Vancouver in Canada for the referendum.

“I voted with my parents — it was such a memorable and moving moment,” she said.

“I was nearly in tears because a few years ago, Ireland was not like that and my parents would not have accepted me. But Ireland has changed.”

 

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