Voters in once staunchly Catholic Ireland were deciding Friday whether to legalize gay marriage in what the government’s equality minister called “a referendum like no other.”
Opinion polls suggest that the government-backed amendment favoring gay marriage will be approved. But gay rights activists expressed caution based on previous votes when anti-government sentiment and low turnout produced surprise referendum defeats. Voting ends Friday night, but results won’t be announced until Saturday.
Electoral officers reported stronger-than-usual turnout at polling stations in Catholic schools, church halls and pubs across this nation of 3.2 million registered voters. Some lines built up outside stations before the 7 a.m. opening.
Ireland has no system for mail-in voting, so residents from places like London, New York, Bangkok and Nairobi planned weekend trips home. Many documented their journeys on Twitter, often under the hashtags #HomeToVote or, for some of those in neighboring Britain, #GetTheBoatToVote. One posted a picture on a London-to-Wales train with travelers decked out in the rainbow colors and balloons of the gay rights movement.
Voters questioned as they left Dublin polling stations demonstrated a clear generational gap. Those under 40 were solidly “yes,” with older voters much more likely to have voted “no.”
“You can give the gays their rights without redefining the whole institution of marriage,” said Bridget Ryan, 61, as she voted with her border collie in tow at a Catholic parish hall.
The government’s minister for equality, Aodhan O Riordain, cast his “yes” ballot and declared it the most important vote of his life. He took heart from signs of a strong turnout, since involvement by young, first-time voters was considered key for passage.
“This is a referendum like no other,” O Riordain said. “There’s a buzz and an anticipation of this like I’ve never seen before.”
A second proposed amendment to lower the minimum age of presidential candidates from 35 to 21 was not expected to pass.
On the gay marriage question, leaders of the country’s predominant faith, Roman Catholicism, have led the opposition, arguing that legalization would undermine marriage as a pillar of society and trigger unintended legal consequences in Irish courts, where adoption and surrogacy rights loom as legal battlegrounds.
Yet even within the church, a vocal grass-roots minority voted in favor, arguing that their bishops had no right to stop the state from managing civil wedding rules.
“A lot of practicing Catholics are voting yes, and it’s no different in the clergy,” said the Rev. Tim Hazelwood, a 56-year-old County Cork parish priest who told his flock from the pulpit at weekend Masses that he was defying the bishops’ line on the vote.
“We didn’t get much leadership from our leaders. I was hearing cold and clinical arguments against gay marriage, and what they said didn’t represent my view of Gospel values at all,” said Hazelwood, a psychotherapist who counsels gay parishioners on how to cope in an often-unfriendly world.
He said he knows of at least four fellow priests who also voted yes and estimates that one in 10 did nationwide. “They would share my view that Ireland and the church have caused gay people a lot of unnecessary hurt and pain, and it’s time for that to stop,” he said.
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