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Citizens' Assembly (Ireland)

The Citizens' Assembly (Irish: An Tionól Saoránach[1] and also known as We The Citizens[2]) is a citizens' assembly established in Ireland in 2016 to consider several political questions including the Constitution of Ireland.[3] Questions considered include: abortion, fixed term parliaments, referendums, population ageing, and climate change.[4][5] Over 18 months a report is produced on each topic. The government is required to respond officially to the reports in the Oireachtas (parliament);[5] as of 9 April 2019 responses have been given on three of the five topics.[fn 1]

Bilingual logo of the Citizens' Assembly

Background edit

The Citizens' Assembly was a successor to the 2012–14 Constitutional Convention, which was established by the Oireachtas in accordance with the government programme agreed by the Fine Gael–Labour coalition formed after the 2011 general election. Convention members were a chairperson nominated by the government, 33 representatives chosen by political parties, and 66 randomly chosen citizens. Meeting over 15 months, it considered seven constitutional issues previously specified by the Oireachtas and two more of its own choosing.[8] It made 18 recommendations for constitutional amendments and 20 for other changes to laws or Oireachtas standing orders; the government accepted some, rejected others, and referred others to committees for further consultation.[9] In 2015 Taoiseach Enda Kenny entertained the possibility of a similar body meeting after the next general election, which occurred in 2016.[10] In the buildup to the election, various politicians proposed changes to Irish abortion law, including repeal of the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution, which guaranteed a foetal right to life. In November 2015, Kenny promised "a Citizen's Convention on the constitution, or whatever title would be appropriate" to address the issue.[11][12]

Establishment edit

The programme agreed by the Fine Gael–independent minority government formed after the 2016 election included this commitment:[13]

We will establish a Citizens' Assembly, within six months, and without participation by politicians, and with a mandate to look at a limited number of key issues over an extended time period. These issues will not be limited to those directly pertaining to the constitution and may include issues such as, for example how we, as a nation, best respond to the challenges and opportunities of an ageing population. That said, we will ask the Citizens' Assembly to make recommendations to the Dáil on further constitutional changes, including on the Eighth Amendment, on fixed term parliaments and on the manner in which referenda are held (e.g. should 'super referendum days', whereby a significant number of referenda take place on the same day, be held).

On 13 July 2016, Damien English moved a resolution in the 32nd Dáil (lower house) approving the "calling of a Citizens' Assembly" to consider the four issues specified in the government programme and "such other matters as may be referred to it".[14] A Green Party amendment was accepted which added "how the State can make Ireland a leader in tackling climate change" to the list of topics.[14] Sinn Féin and AAA–PBP amendments were rejected.[14] An analogous resolution was passed in the 25th Seanad (upper house) on 15 July.[4]

In July 2019 Eoghan Murphy introducing legislation related to the "Dublin Citizens' Assembly" and the "Citizens' Assembly 2019".[15]The Irish Times viewed these as lacking the justification for the original Citizens' Assembly, in that they relate to "purely political issue[s] which TDs are well capable of deciding".[16]

Personnel edit

Chairpeople edit

Members edit

Members of each assembly consist of 99 citizens and the chair for a total of 100 members.

The 99 other members were "citizens entitled to vote at a referendum, randomly selected so as to be broadly representative of Irish society".[4] The representative criteria included gender, age, location, and social class.[17]

For the 66 citizen members of the Constitutional Convention, these 99 plus 99 substitutes[18] were selected by an opinion polling company;[19][20][21] Red C won the tender and began selection at the start of September.[22] The Electoral (Amendment) Act 2016 was passed to enable the electoral register to be used in this process.[20][5][23] Media were asked not to photograph the citizen members before the inaugural assembly meeting.[24] Members received expenses but no other payment.[17] Of the original 99 members, 17 withdrew before the first working meeting, whose replacements immediately took over; another 11 withdrew before the final abortion meeting, whose replacements did not participate until the assembly moved on to its next topic for discussion.[17] Seven replacements joining in January 2018 were removed the following month when it emerged they were recruited via acquaintances of a Red C employee, who was then suspended, rather than via random selection.[25]

Secretariat edit

The assembly's secretariat was drawn from the civil service.[26][27] Its office was at 16 Parnell Square in Dublin.[28] In June 2016 the assembly's cost was estimated at €600,000, drawn from the Department of the Taoiseach, with €200,000 in 2016 and the balance in 2017.[5][29] In October 2016 the Taoiseach said €2m had been set aside.[30] The total cost to March 2019 was €2,355,557, of which €1,535,133 was spent in 2017.[31]

Deliberation process edit

 
Grand Hotel, Malahide, where the assembly meets.

The inaugural and introductory assembly meeting was held on 15 October 2016 at Dublin Castle.[24][32][33][34] The Grand Hotel, Malahide won the tender to host later, working, meetings.[34] RTÉ News predicted that there would be ten weekend sessions, each "opened with an address from the Chairperson, followed by expert presentations, Q&A sessions and debate, roundtable discussion and a plenary session."[22] Meetings were livestreamed.[34][35] Submissions from the public were invited.[4][19] The assembly was originally supposed to complete its business within a year of its first meeting.[4] This was extended in October 2017 and again in March 2018, to 27 April 2018.[36] The government then formally responded to each report.[4] The calendar published in October 2016 included seven three-day working meetings, one in November 2016 and one each month from January to July 2017.[37]

Assembly matters edit

Eighth Amendment edit

The first issue to be considered was the Eighth Amendment,[4] beginning at its first working meeting on 25 November 2016.[38][37] Enda Kenny in September 2016 estimated it could take "six to seven months" to issue a report,[33] which was referred to an Oireachtas joint committee,[39] This committee, in turn, produced a report for debate in each house.[4] Resolutions to establish the "Special Joint Committee on the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution" were passed on 4 and 13 April 2017 by the Dáil and Seanad respectively.[40]

The assembly's inaugural meeting decided that the abortion issue would be the topic for its first four working meetings,[24] a number later increased to five.[41] An advisory group of five experts was appointed: a medical lawyer, two constitutional lawyers, and two obstetricians.[24] The chairperson said she would investigate claims that an assembly member had publicly expressed pro-choice views on Twitter.[24][42] In the Dáil, Mattie McGrath complained that two of the five experts had previously expressed dissatisfaction with the existing abortion provisions.[43]

The opposition Anti-Austerity Alliance–People Before Profit (AAA–PBP) scheduled the second stage of a private member's bill repealing the Eighth Amendment for debate in the Dáil on 25 October 2016.[44][45] Fine Gael opposed the bill on the grounds that it would pre-empt the Citizens' Assembly discussion.[44] Similarly, independent minister Katherine Zappone said that, in deference to the assembly's work, she would oppose the bill despite herself favouring repeal.[46] The Independent Alliance ministers wanted a free vote, which Fine Gael opposed as compromising cabinet collective responsibility.[44] As a compromise, it was agreed that government TDs would oppose the AAA–PBP bill and would not shorten the assembly's timeframe for considering the abortion issue, but that the Oireachtas would expedite the processing of the assembly's report, by establishing the select committee ahead of time and giving it a strict six-month lifespan.[44] Accordingly, Simon Harris, the Minister for Health, moved an amendment to the second-reading motion, that "Dáil Éireann declines to give the Bill a second reading in order that the Citizens' Assembly, established by Resolutions of Dáil Éireann and Seanad Éireann, can conclude its deliberations on the Eighth Amendment which is the subject matter of this Bill, and report to the Oireachtas in the first half of 2017".[47]

Over 13,000 submissions were received from the public by the closing date of 16 December 2016. More than 8,000 were submitted electronically, including over 3,200 the final 24 hours.[48][28][49] Submissions were uploaded to the assembly website, with "personal stories or sensitive submissions" deidentified.[48] Based on feedback from members, the chairperson selected 17 submitting organisations to make presentations to the assembly.[50] These were announced on 21 February: Amnesty International Ireland, Atheist Ireland, Coalition to Repeal the Eighth Amendment, Doctors for Choice, Doctors for Life Ireland, Every Life Counts, Family & Life, Irish Catholic Bishops' Conference, Irish Family Planning Association, Parents for Choice, Pro Life Campaign, General Synod of the Church of Ireland, Iona Institute, National Women's Council of Ireland, Union of Students in Ireland, Women Hurt, Youth Defence.[50]

Votes edit

The final meeting on abortion began on 22 April, with a series of votes held based on the deliberations from the earlier meetings. The first day's votes were on Article 40.3.3°, the subsection of the Constitution added by the Eighth Amendment:[41][51]

  1. It should not be retained in full (by 79 votes to 12)
  2. It should be replaced or amended (50 votes) rather than deleted and not replaced (39 votes)
  3. It should allow the Oireachtas to legislate (51 votes) rather than making direct provisions within the Constitution itself (38 votes) regarding "termination of pregnancy, any rights of the unborn, and any rights of the pregnant woman"

The second day's votes were recommendations for the envisaged Oireachtas legislation. There were separate votes on a range of potential circumstances in which abortion might be permitted, possibly restricted to a maximum number of weeks' gestation.[52]

Votes for given option, out of a total of 88 votes cast.[52]
Vote
no.
Circumstance Time limit for gestation Other
[fn 2]
Never 12 weeks 22 weeks No limit
1 Real and substantial physical risk to life of woman 1 8 12 62 5
2 Real and substantial risk to life of woman by suicide 4 9 22 48 5
3 Serious risk to physical health[fn 3] of woman 6 12 21 43 6
4 Serious risk to mental health[fn 3] of woman 8 15 24 35 6
5 Serious risk to health[fn 3] of woman 8 12 25 40 3
6 Risk to physical health[fn 3] of woman 18 12 26 28 4
7 Risk to mental health[fn 3] of woman 18 12 31 20 7
8 Risk to health[fn 3] of woman 18 10 30 25 5
9 Pregnancy resulting from rape 9 23 25 25 6
10 Fetal abnormality likely to result in death before or shortly after birth 10 6 18 53 1
11 Significant fetal abnormality not likely to result in death before or shortly after birth 17 9 32 25 5
12 Socio-economic reasons 23 24 30 6 5
13 Unrestricted 29 25 23 4 7

Journalist Mary Minihan reported the following week that "the consensus in the Oireachtas is that the assembly's recommendations were an overly-liberal interpretation of the current thinking of middle Ireland on the issue."[53] On 29 June 2017, the assembly's official report was laid before the Oireachtas and published.[54][55] On 11 July 2017, the Oireachtas Joint Committee agreed its programme for considering the report, including a presentation from the assembly chairperson at a public session on 20 September 2017.[56][57]

Laffoy was joined at the meeting by the two leaders of the assembly secretariat.[57] She told the committee that the assembly had considered all of article 40.3.3, including the 13th and 14th Amendments (rights to travel and to information) as well as the 8th (right to life of the unborn), because they were "inextricabl[y] link[ed]".[57][58][59] Rónán Mullen said he found its process "disturbing" and criticised it for not acknowledging that the 8th amendment had "saved thousands of lives".[57][60] Lynn Ruane asked why there was no option to vote for "express positive right to abortion access or to bodily autonomy in pregnancy"; the latter was in the assembly report's ancillary list of issues for the Oireachtas to consider.[57] Laffoy regretted that the assembly had not addressed increased illegal online ordering of abortion pills.[57][59]

The Oireachtas responded to the report by establishing a Joint Committee on the Eighth Amendment, which produced its own report in December 2017, with dissent from pro-life members.[61] The government decided a month later to implement the committee's report.[62] The Thirty-sixth Amendment of the Constitution of Ireland, approved by referendum on 25 May 2018, replaced the constitutional prohibition with a provision allowing the Oireachtas to regulate abortion. The Oireachtas duly passed the Health (Regulation of Termination of Pregnancy) Act 2018 to legalise and regulate abortion, up to 12 weeks' gestation for any reason, and up to viability for fatal fetal abnormality or serious health risk to the pregnant woman.[63]

Ageing population edit

The first meetings on "how we best respond to the challenges and opportunities of an ageing population" were held on 10–11 June 2017.[64][65] In May a second weekend, on 8–9 July, was added to the schedule.[66][64][65] The assembly received 120 submissions from the public.[64] The first meeting's main topics were long-term care and independent living.[64] It was addressed by Eamon O'Shea, social gerontology professor at NUI Galway;[67] Pat Healy, social care director at the Health Service Executive; and Michael Browne of Third Age Ireland and the Citizens Information Board.[68][69] The second meeting focused on pensions and retirement.[70] Votes were taken on 16 questions: 11 yes/no questions and 5 multiple-choice.[71]

Votes edit

Yes:no results (of 78 votes cast) on Citizens' Assembly questions dealing with population ageing[71]
No. Question: Should the government ... ? Yes:no
vote
1 prioritise and implement existing policies and strategies in relation to older people 78:0
3 increase public resources allocated for the care of older people
(See also multiple-choice questions 2, 4, and 5)
67:10[fn 4]
6 expedite the current commitment to place home care for older persons on a statutory footing 77:1
7 extend protection regulations from residential care to other care services
(See also multiple-choice question 8)
77:1
9 make pension scheme mandatory (additional to State pension scheme) 67:10[fn 4]
10 remove the anomaly between mandatory retirement age (65) and State pension age (66) 75:3
11 abolish the mandatory retirement age 67:11
12 benchmark the State pension to average earnings 69:9
13 mandate greater transparency in private pension fees 78:0
14 backdate the Homemakers Scheme to 1973[fn 5] 68:10
15 enhance State support for [family] carers 77:1
Multiple-choice questions edit

Assembly members could distribute votes among multiple answers to the multiple-choice questions except question 2.

Question 2
In general, who should be principally responsible for providing required care for older people?
  1. Person or family, totally: 1
  2. Person or family, mainly : 47
  3. State, mainly: 25
  4. State, totally: 5[fn 6]
Question 4
Where do you believe additional funding for care of older people should primarily be spent?
  1. Residential care: 122
  2. Home care: 198
  3. Community-based integrated housing: 186
Question 5
Where do you believe overall funding for care of older people should come from?
  1. General taxation: 215
  2. Compulsory social insurance: 255
  3. Private insurance: 115
  4. Public–private cost-sharing: 150
Question 8
If the Government were to decide to extend regulation to other health and care services for older people, what other services do you believe should be regulated?
  1. Respite care: 70
  2. Day care: 68
  3. Home care: 72
  4. Supported housing: 71
Question 16
When considering how we respond to the challenges and opportunities of an ageing population, which of these suggestions do you believe are the most important to implement?
  1. responsibility for older people should be formally delegated to a dedicated Minister of State for Older People. 72
  2. dedicated information service for older people: 71
  3. ensure that older people have a stronger voice in determining their own care needs: 69
  4. stronger governmental leadership in relation to the prioritisation of the health and social care needs of older people: 65
  5. encourage non-financial intergenerational transfers: 57
  6. Assisted Decision-Making (Capacity) Act 2015[fn 7] and elder abuse prevention: 72

On 15 May 2019 Jim Daly, the Minister of State for Mental Health and Older People, gave a written Dáil response in relation to those recommendations within the remit of the Department of Health.[74]

Climate change edit

One meeting on climate change was planned, for the weekends starting 30 September and 4 November 2017; the second was added to the schedule on 17 July.[75] Speakers included the chair of the advisory group for a promised "National Dialogue on Climate Change".[75][76]

Recommendations, all passed by at least 80% of members, included: empowering an independent body to address climate change; Greenhouse gas (GHG) tax, including carbon tax and agricultural GHG tax; encouragement of climate change mitigation, electric vehicles, public transport, forests, organic farming, and natural peat bogs; reduction of food waste; microgeneration of electricity; ending subsidy of peat extraction; increasing bus lanes, cycle lanes and park and ride facilities.[77]

The Oireachtas responded to the report by establishing a Joint Committee on Climate Action, which published its own report on 29 March 2019.[78] On 9 May 2019 the Dáil endorsed the committee's report and symbolically declared a "climate and biodiversity emergency",.[79][80] The motion also requested a Citizen's Assembly to study the biodiversity loss emergency and how the state can improve its response.[80] A "government action plan on climate change" followed on 17 June 2019.[81]

Referendums edit

On the weekend of 13–14 January 2018 the Assembly considered the manner in which referendums are held. Recommendations included:[82]

  • replacing the ad-hoc Referendum Commission with a permanent Electoral Commission, which would be "obliged to give its view on significant matters of factual or legal dispute that arise during a referendum campaign in the public domain (including on social media)"
  • giving equal public money to both sides in referendum campaigns, imposing spending limits for registered parties and advocacy groups, and prohibiting anonymous donations to these groups;
  • allowing multiple referendums on the same day, as at present; 41.7% preferred a maximum of two simultaneously
  • allowing for preferendums with more than two (yes/no) options; in which case 52% preferred single transferable vote would be used to determine the outcome
  • allowing citizens' initiatives for bringing questions either to the Oireachtas or to a referendum

The Assembly considered measures to increase voter turnout. It supported early voting, weekend voting, postal voting, online voting, lowering the voting age to 16, and allowing nonresidents to vote for up to five years after emigrating. It opposed compulsory voting.[82]

Fixed-term parliaments edit

The meeting on fixed-term parliaments was scheduled for the weekend of 3–4 March but because of Storm Emma was postponed until 14–15 April.[83] The issue was added to the assembly's remit at the insistence of Shane Ross of the Independent Alliance during negotiations on forming the government.[84] There were eight public submissions, including one from the Green Party in favour of the UK system (embodied in the Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011).[84]

With 71 members present, the assembly voted 36–35 in favour fixed terms; 39–27 for 4 (rather than 5) years as the term; 63–3 in favour of allowing the term to be "cut short subject to certain conditions".[85]

Whose approval is needed for an early general election: Assembly votes[85]
Approval by Yes No Not stated
Cabinet 39 20 12
Dáil simple majority 29 27 15
Dáil supermajority 40 17 14
President 46 9 16

Gender equality edit

In 2019, the Irish government announced two further Citizens' Assemblies including gender equality.[86]

This assembly was tasked with exploring and, within 6 months, making recommendations on; barriers that facilitate gender discrimination towards girls and boys, women and men; removing gender related economic inequalities, reassess the economic value placed traditional 'women's work'; women's full participation in workplace and political; considering the gender imbalance in care; and gender imbalance in low pay sectors.[87]

Former Secretary-General of the European Commission Catherine Day was appointed as chair.[87]

Assessments edit

In November 2016, David Van Reybrouck commended the Citizens' Assembly and the predecessor Constitutional Convention as models that other European countries could usefully imitate, which could counter the rise of populism.[88][89] A 2019 editorial in The Irish Times said that the Citizens' Assembly's work on abortion was a "great success" that "paved the way for the resolution of [a] potentially contentious social issue" and "a vital step on the road to generating support for constitutional change".[16]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ The fourth and fifth topics were covered by a single report, submitted on 21 June 2018.[6] A response was still outstanding on 9 April 2019.[7]
  2. ^ Includes abstentions and invalid votes
  3. ^ a b c d e f Members also voted by 60 to 23 that "a distinction should not be drawn between the physical and mental health of the woman".[52]
  4. ^ a b One invalid vote
  5. ^ The Homemakers Scheme makes it easier for those who provide full-time care to an incapacitated person to qualify for a State pension. As of December 2016 the maximum backdating is to the scheme's 1994 introduction.[72]
  6. ^ This value is missing from the source document but can be back-calculated from the other values.
  7. ^ The Assisted Decision-Making (Capacity) Act 2015 is the framework for assisting those with impaired capacity to make life decisions, such as via advance healthcare directives and enduring power of attorney.[73]

References edit

Sources edit

  • "Questions: Citizens' Assembly". Dáil Éireann debates. KildareStreet.com. 4 October 2016. Retrieved 5 October 2016.
  • "Citizens' Assembly". Department of the Taoiseach. Retrieved 14 October 2016.

Citations edit

  1. ^ "Baile" [Home]. Official website. Citizens' Assembly. Retrieved 20 February 2020.
  2. ^ "The Irish Citizens' Assembly Project". www.citizenassembly.ie. Retrieved 26 December 2020.
  3. ^ "Convention on the Constitution". Citizens' Assembly.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h "Citizens' Assembly: Motion". Seanad debates. KildareStreet.com. 15 July 2016. Retrieved 27 July 2016.
  5. ^ a b c d "Government appoints Chairperson to Citizens' Assembly". MerrionStreet (Press release). 27 July 2016. Retrieved 28 July 2016.
  6. ^ "Final Report on Manner in which Referenda are Held & Fixed Term Parliaments" (PDF). Citizens' Assembly. 21 June 2018. Retrieved 17 June 2019.
  7. ^ "Question 626: Referendum Campaigns". Parliamentary Questions (32nd Dáil). Oireachtas. 9 April 2019. Retrieved 17 June 2019.
  8. ^ . Convention on the Constitution. March 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 March 2016. Retrieved 27 July 2016.
  9. ^ "Written Answers No. 69: Constitutional Convention Recommendations". Dáil Éireann Debate. 17 May 2015. Vol. 909 No. 1 p.53. Retrieved 27 July 2016.
  10. ^ Kenny, Enda (9 June 2015). "Constitutional Convention Recommendations (Continued)". Dáil Éireann debates. Retrieved 27 November 2015. While there was unanimous support for a second convention in the [Convention's final] report, it was acknowledged that this is an exercise that can only be achieved once in the lifetime of any Dáil
  11. ^ Hand, Lise (27 November 2015). "Taoiseach denies rift with Fine Gael deputy leader Minister Reilly over abortion referendum". Irish Independent. Retrieved 27 November 2015.
  12. ^ "Kenny would call forum on abortion if re-elected". RTÉ News. RTÉ.ie. 27 November 2015. Retrieved 27 November 2015.
  13. ^ "A Programme for a Partnership Government" (PDF). Government of Ireland. 11 May 2016. p. 153. Retrieved 1 June 2016.
  14. ^ a b c "Citizens' Assembly: Motion". Dáil debates. KildareStreet.com. 13 July 2016. Retrieved 27 July 2016.
  15. ^ "Citizens' Assemblies Bill 2019 — Second Stage". Seanad Éireann (25th Seanad) debates. Oireachtas. 4 July 2019. Retrieved 8 July 2019.
  16. ^ a b "The Irish Times view on citizens' assemblies: out-sourcing political decisions". The Irish Times. 14 June 2019. Retrieved 14 June 2019.
  17. ^ a b c Leahy, Pat (24 April 2017). "Who exactly are the citizens in the Citizens' Assembly?". The Irish Times. Retrieved 27 April 2017.
  18. ^ Dáil debates, 4 October 2016. "these 99 citizens and their 99 substitutes"
  19. ^ a b "Written answers: Citizens Assembly". Dáil debates. KildareStreet.com. 19 July 2016. Retrieved 27 July 2016.
  20. ^ a b "Electoral (Amendment) (No. 2) Bill". Seanad debates. KildareStreet.com. 15 July 2016. Retrieved 27 July 2016.
  21. ^ "Written answers: Citizens Assembly". Dáil debates. KildareStreet.com. 21 June 2016. Retrieved 27 July 2016.
  22. ^ a b "More details emerge about Citizens' Assembly - RTÉ News". RTÉ.ie. 10 September 2016. Retrieved 10 September 2016.
  23. ^ "Electoral (Amendment) Act 2016". Irish Statute Book. Attorney General of Ireland. 24 July 2016. Retrieved 10 August 2016.
  24. ^ a b c d e "Citizens' Assembly to discuss Eighth Amendment". RTÉ.ie. 15 October 2016. Retrieved 15 October 2016.
  25. ^ Bray, Allison (21 February 2018). "Recruiter for Citizens Assembly suspended after replacement members enlisted through personal contacts and not randomly". Irish Independent. Retrieved 21 February 2018.
  26. ^ "Written answers: Citizens Assembly". Dáil debates. KildareStreet.com. 12 July 2016. Retrieved 27 July 2016.
  27. ^ . Archived from the original on 16 February 2020. Retrieved 23 January 2020.
  28. ^ a b Leahy, Pat (16 December 2016). "Over 4,500 submissions on abortion made to Citizens' Assembly". The Irish Times. Retrieved 16 December 2016.
  29. ^ Select Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform, and Taoiseach (30 June 2016). "Estimates for Public Services 2016: Vote 2 - Department of the Taoiseach (Revised)". Oireachtas Joint and Select Committees. KildareStreet.com. Retrieved 27 July 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  30. ^ Dáil debates, 4 October 2016. "A total of €2 million has been set aside by my own Department for the citizen's assembly."
  31. ^ "Department of An Taoiseach: Citizens Assembly". Dáil: Written answers. kildarestreet.com. 26 March 2019. Retrieved 18 June 2019.
  32. ^ Dáil debates, 4 October 2016. "The assembly's inaugural meeting will be an introductory session to allow the members of the assembly the opportunity to meet the chairperson and one another and to gain a better understanding of the context for the work that they will be undertaking."
  33. ^ a b "Citizens' Assembly's first meeting set for October". RTÉ.ie. 21 September 2016. Retrieved 21 September 2016.
  34. ^ a b c Murphy, Darragh Peter (21 September 2016). "The Citizens' Assembly will take place on Saturday 15 October in Dublin Castle". TheJournal.ie. Retrieved 5 October 2016.
  35. ^ "Live Webcast". Citizens' Assembly. Retrieved 15 October 2016.
  36. ^ "Citizens' Assembly: Motion". Dáil debates. KildareStreet.com. 3 October 2017. Retrieved 22 March 2018.; "Citizens' Assembly: Motion". Seanad debates. KildareStreet.com. 3 October 2017. Retrieved 22 March 2018.; "Citizens' Assembly: Motion". Dáil debates. KildareStreet.com. 21 March 2018. Retrieved 22 March 2018.; "Citizens' Assembly: Motion". Seanad debates. KildareStreet.com. 21 March 2018. Retrieved 22 March 2018.;
  37. ^ a b "Meetings: Calendar of Dates" (PDF). Official website. Citizens' Assembly. Retrieved 14 October 2016.
  38. ^ Dáil debates, 4 October 2016. "The assembly will meet again in late November, at which time it will commence its consideration of the first item referred to it by the Dáil resolution, that is, the eighth amendment of the Constitution."
  39. ^ Dáil debates, 4 October 2016. "I think we will have a special Oireachtas committee on that."
  40. ^ "Establishment of a Special Joint Committee on the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution: Motion". Dáil debates. KildareStreet.com. 4 April 2017. Retrieved 5 April 2017.; "Establishment of Special Committee on the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution: Motion". Seanad debates. Oireachtas. 13 April 2017. Retrieved 13 April 2017.
  41. ^ a b "Fifth Meeting of the Citizens' Assembly on the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution". Citizens' Assembly. 23 April 2017. Retrieved 23 April 2017.
  42. ^ O'Connor, Wayne (16 October 2016). "Kenny tells new Citizens' Assembly of online risks". Sunday Independent. Retrieved 16 October 2016.
  43. ^ "Topical Issue Debate; Citizens Assembly". Dáil Éireann debates. Oireachtas. 22 November 2016. pp. 32–33. Retrieved 23 November 2016.
  44. ^ a b c d "Government parties block abortion bill vote amid fears it would split the Government". BreakingNews.ie. 25 October 2016. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  45. ^ "Private Members' Business" (PDF). Dáil Éireann Order papers. 68. Oireachtas: 1413. 25 October 2016. Retrieved 25 October 2016. 22. [...] Thirty-fifth Amendment of the Constitution (Repeal of the Eighth Amendment) Bill 2016 — Second Stage
  46. ^ "Katherine Zappone 'to vote against motion to repeal constitutional ban on abortion'". Irish Independent. 16 October 2016. Retrieved 16 October 2016.
  47. ^ "Thirty-fifth Amendment of the Constitution (Repeal of the Eighth Amendment) Bill 2016: Second Stage [Private Members]". Dáil debates. Oireachtas. 25 October 2016. pp. 17–18. Retrieved 27 November 2016.
  48. ^ a b "Assembly receives more than 13,000 submissions". RTÉ.ie. 22 December 2016. Retrieved 22 December 2016.
  49. ^ Leahy, Pat (16 December 2016). "Citizens' Assembly deluged with abortion submissions". The Irish Times. Retrieved 19 December 2016.
  50. ^ a b "17 Advocacy Groups to Address Citizens' Assembly on the Topic of Eighth Amendment". Citizens' Assembly. 21 February 2017. Retrieved 27 February 2017.
  51. ^ "Citizens Assembly votes to give power to Oireachtas regarding abortion". Irish Examiner. 22 April 2017. Retrieved 23 April 2017.
  52. ^ a b c "Fifth Meeting on the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution: Ballot 4B Results" (PDF). Official website. Citizens' Assembly. 23 April 2017. Retrieved 23 April 2017.
  53. ^ Minihan, Mary (29 April 2017). "Was Citizens' Assembly best way to deal with abortion question?". The Irish Times. Retrieved 1 May 2017.
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  55. ^ Staines, Michael (29 June 2017). "Citizens' Assembly report on Eighth Amendment delivered to government". Newstalk. Dublin. Retrieved 29 June 2017.
  56. ^ Joint Committee on the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution (11 July 2017). "Consideration of Recommendations of Citizens' Assembly: Agreed Proposals for Committee's Work Plan" (PDF). Oireachtas. Retrieved 28 July 2017.
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  58. ^ "Opening Statement by Ms. Justice Mary Laffoy, Chair Citizens' Assembly‌" (PDF). Eighth Amendment of the Constitution : Presentations. Oireachtas. 20 September 2017. Retrieved 21 September 2017.
  59. ^ a b "Laffoy 'keen to see certainty' over Eighth Amendment". RTÉ.ie. 20 September 2017. Retrieved 21 September 2017.
  60. ^ Murray, Shona (21 September 2017). "Citizens' assembly 'failed to adequately consider use of abortion pills'". Irish Independent. Retrieved 21 September 2017.
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External links edit

  • Official website

citizens, assembly, ireland, confused, with, portuguese, political, party, citizens, german, political, party, bürger, citizens, assembly, irish, tionól, saoránach, also, known, citizens, citizens, assembly, established, ireland, 2016, consider, several, polit. Not to be confused with the Portuguese political party We the Citizens and the German political party Wir Burger The Citizens Assembly Irish An Tionol Saoranach 1 and also known as We The Citizens 2 is a citizens assembly established in Ireland in 2016 to consider several political questions including the Constitution of Ireland 3 Questions considered include abortion fixed term parliaments referendums population ageing and climate change 4 5 Over 18 months a report is produced on each topic The government is required to respond officially to the reports in the Oireachtas parliament 5 as of 9 April 2019 update responses have been given on three of the five topics fn 1 Bilingual logo of the Citizens Assembly Contents 1 Background 2 Establishment 3 Personnel 3 1 Chairpeople 3 2 Members 3 3 Secretariat 4 Deliberation process 5 Assembly matters 5 1 Eighth Amendment 5 1 1 Votes 5 2 Ageing population 5 2 1 Votes 5 2 1 1 Multiple choice questions 5 3 Climate change 5 4 Referendums 5 5 Fixed term parliaments 5 6 Gender equality 6 Assessments 7 Footnotes 8 References 8 1 Sources 8 2 Citations 9 External linksBackground editSee also Constitutional Convention Ireland The Citizens Assembly was a successor to the 2012 14 Constitutional Convention which was established by the Oireachtas in accordance with the government programme agreed by the Fine Gael Labour coalition formed after the 2011 general election Convention members were a chairperson nominated by the government 33 representatives chosen by political parties and 66 randomly chosen citizens Meeting over 15 months it considered seven constitutional issues previously specified by the Oireachtas and two more of its own choosing 8 It made 18 recommendations for constitutional amendments and 20 for other changes to laws or Oireachtas standing orders the government accepted some rejected others and referred others to committees for further consultation 9 In 2015 Taoiseach Enda Kenny entertained the possibility of a similar body meeting after the next general election which occurred in 2016 10 In the buildup to the election various politicians proposed changes to Irish abortion law including repeal of the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution which guaranteed a foetal right to life In November 2015 Kenny promised a Citizen s Convention on the constitution or whatever title would be appropriate to address the issue 11 12 Establishment editThe programme agreed by the Fine Gael independent minority government formed after the 2016 election included this commitment 13 We will establish a Citizens Assembly within six months and without participation by politicians and with a mandate to look at a limited number of key issues over an extended time period These issues will not be limited to those directly pertaining to the constitution and may include issues such as for example how we as a nation best respond to the challenges and opportunities of an ageing population That said we will ask the Citizens Assembly to make recommendations to the Dail on further constitutional changes including on the Eighth Amendment on fixed term parliaments and on the manner in which referenda are held e g should super referendum days whereby a significant number of referenda take place on the same day be held On 13 July 2016 Damien English moved a resolution in the 32nd Dail lower house approving the calling of a Citizens Assembly to consider the four issues specified in the government programme and such other matters as may be referred to it 14 A Green Party amendment was accepted which added how the State can make Ireland a leader in tackling climate change to the list of topics 14 Sinn Fein and AAA PBP amendments were rejected 14 An analogous resolution was passed in the 25th Seanad upper house on 15 July 4 In July 2019 Eoghan Murphy introducing legislation related to the Dublin Citizens Assembly and the Citizens Assembly 2019 15 The Irish Times viewed these as lacking the justification for the original Citizens Assembly in that they relate to purely political issue s which TDs are well capable of deciding 16 Personnel editChairpeople edit Members edit Members of each assembly consist of 99 citizens and the chair for a total of 100 members The 99 other members were citizens entitled to vote at a referendum randomly selected so as to be broadly representative of Irish society 4 The representative criteria included gender age location and social class 17 For the 66 citizen members of the Constitutional Convention these 99 plus 99 substitutes 18 were selected by an opinion polling company 19 20 21 Red C won the tender and began selection at the start of September 22 The Electoral Amendment Act 2016 was passed to enable the electoral register to be used in this process 20 5 23 Media were asked not to photograph the citizen members before the inaugural assembly meeting 24 Members received expenses but no other payment 17 Of the original 99 members 17 withdrew before the first working meeting whose replacements immediately took over another 11 withdrew before the final abortion meeting whose replacements did not participate until the assembly moved on to its next topic for discussion 17 Seven replacements joining in January 2018 were removed the following month when it emerged they were recruited via acquaintances of a Red C employee who was then suspended rather than via random selection 25 Secretariat edit The assembly s secretariat was drawn from the civil service 26 27 Its office was at 16 Parnell Square in Dublin 28 In June 2016 the assembly s cost was estimated at 600 000 drawn from the Department of the Taoiseach with 200 000 in 2016 and the balance in 2017 5 29 In October 2016 the Taoiseach said 2m had been set aside 30 The total cost to March 2019 was 2 355 557 of which 1 535 133 was spent in 2017 31 Deliberation process edit nbsp Grand Hotel Malahide where the assembly meets The inaugural and introductory assembly meeting was held on 15 October 2016 at Dublin Castle 24 32 33 34 The Grand Hotel Malahide won the tender to host later working meetings 34 RTE News predicted that there would be ten weekend sessions each opened with an address from the Chairperson followed by expert presentations Q amp A sessions and debate roundtable discussion and a plenary session 22 Meetings were livestreamed 34 35 Submissions from the public were invited 4 19 The assembly was originally supposed to complete its business within a year of its first meeting 4 This was extended in October 2017 and again in March 2018 to 27 April 2018 36 The government then formally responded to each report 4 The calendar published in October 2016 included seven three day working meetings one in November 2016 and one each month from January to July 2017 37 Assembly matters editEighth Amendment edit See also Eighth Amendment of the Constitution of Ireland Abortion in the Republic of Ireland and Thirty sixth Amendment of the Constitution of Ireland The first issue to be considered was the Eighth Amendment 4 beginning at its first working meeting on 25 November 2016 38 37 Enda Kenny in September 2016 estimated it could take six to seven months to issue a report 33 which was referred to an Oireachtas joint committee 39 This committee in turn produced a report for debate in each house 4 Resolutions to establish the Special Joint Committee on the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution were passed on 4 and 13 April 2017 by the Dail and Seanad respectively 40 The assembly s inaugural meeting decided that the abortion issue would be the topic for its first four working meetings 24 a number later increased to five 41 An advisory group of five experts was appointed a medical lawyer two constitutional lawyers and two obstetricians 24 The chairperson said she would investigate claims that an assembly member had publicly expressed pro choice views on Twitter 24 42 In the Dail Mattie McGrath complained that two of the five experts had previously expressed dissatisfaction with the existing abortion provisions 43 The opposition Anti Austerity Alliance People Before Profit AAA PBP scheduled the second stage of a private member s bill repealing the Eighth Amendment for debate in the Dail on 25 October 2016 44 45 Fine Gael opposed the bill on the grounds that it would pre empt the Citizens Assembly discussion 44 Similarly independent minister Katherine Zappone said that in deference to the assembly s work she would oppose the bill despite herself favouring repeal 46 The Independent Alliance ministers wanted a free vote which Fine Gael opposed as compromising cabinet collective responsibility 44 As a compromise it was agreed that government TDs would oppose the AAA PBP bill and would not shorten the assembly s timeframe for considering the abortion issue but that the Oireachtas would expedite the processing of the assembly s report by establishing the select committee ahead of time and giving it a strict six month lifespan 44 Accordingly Simon Harris the Minister for Health moved an amendment to the second reading motion that Dail Eireann declines to give the Bill a second reading in order that the Citizens Assembly established by Resolutions of Dail Eireann and Seanad Eireann can conclude its deliberations on the Eighth Amendment which is the subject matter of this Bill and report to the Oireachtas in the first half of 2017 47 Over 13 000 submissions were received from the public by the closing date of 16 December 2016 More than 8 000 were submitted electronically including over 3 200 the final 24 hours 48 28 49 Submissions were uploaded to the assembly website with personal stories or sensitive submissions deidentified 48 Based on feedback from members the chairperson selected 17 submitting organisations to make presentations to the assembly 50 These were announced on 21 February Amnesty International Ireland Atheist Ireland Coalition to Repeal the Eighth Amendment Doctors for Choice Doctors for Life Ireland Every Life Counts Family amp Life Irish Catholic Bishops Conference Irish Family Planning Association Parents for Choice Pro Life Campaign General Synod of the Church of Ireland Iona Institute National Women s Council of Ireland Union of Students in Ireland Women Hurt Youth Defence 50 Votes edit The final meeting on abortion began on 22 April with a series of votes held based on the deliberations from the earlier meetings The first day s votes were on Article 40 3 3 the subsection of the Constitution added by the Eighth Amendment 41 51 It should not be retained in full by 79 votes to 12 It should be replaced or amended 50 votes rather than deleted and not replaced 39 votes It should allow the Oireachtas to legislate 51 votes rather than making direct provisions within the Constitution itself 38 votes regarding termination of pregnancy any rights of the unborn and any rights of the pregnant woman The second day s votes were recommendations for the envisaged Oireachtas legislation There were separate votes on a range of potential circumstances in which abortion might be permitted possibly restricted to a maximum number of weeks gestation 52 Votes for given option out of a total of 88 votes cast 52 Voteno Circumstance Time limit for gestation Other fn 2 Never 12 weeks 22 weeks No limit1 Real and substantial physical risk to life of woman 1 8 12 62 52 Real and substantial risk to life of woman by suicide 4 9 22 48 53 Serious risk to physical health fn 3 of woman 6 12 21 43 64 Serious risk to mental health fn 3 of woman 8 15 24 35 65 Serious risk to health fn 3 of woman 8 12 25 40 36 Risk to physical health fn 3 of woman 18 12 26 28 47 Risk to mental health fn 3 of woman 18 12 31 20 78 Risk to health fn 3 of woman 18 10 30 25 59 Pregnancy resulting from rape 9 23 25 25 610 Fetal abnormality likely to result in death before or shortly after birth 10 6 18 53 111 Significant fetal abnormality not likely to result in death before or shortly after birth 17 9 32 25 512 Socio economic reasons 23 24 30 6 513 Unrestricted 29 25 23 4 7Journalist Mary Minihan reported the following week that the consensus in the Oireachtas is that the assembly s recommendations were an overly liberal interpretation of the current thinking of middle Ireland on the issue 53 On 29 June 2017 the assembly s official report was laid before the Oireachtas and published 54 55 On 11 July 2017 the Oireachtas Joint Committee agreed its programme for considering the report including a presentation from the assembly chairperson at a public session on 20 September 2017 56 57 Laffoy was joined at the meeting by the two leaders of the assembly secretariat 57 She told the committee that the assembly had considered all of article 40 3 3 including the 13th and 14th Amendments rights to travel and to information as well as the 8th right to life of the unborn because they were inextricabl y link ed 57 58 59 Ronan Mullen said he found its process disturbing and criticised it for not acknowledging that the 8th amendment had saved thousands of lives 57 60 Lynn Ruane asked why there was no option to vote for express positive right to abortion access or to bodily autonomy in pregnancy the latter was in the assembly report s ancillary list of issues for the Oireachtas to consider 57 Laffoy regretted that the assembly had not addressed increased illegal online ordering of abortion pills 57 59 The Oireachtas responded to the report by establishing a Joint Committee on the Eighth Amendment which produced its own report in December 2017 with dissent from pro life members 61 The government decided a month later to implement the committee s report 62 The Thirty sixth Amendment of the Constitution of Ireland approved by referendum on 25 May 2018 replaced the constitutional prohibition with a provision allowing the Oireachtas to regulate abortion The Oireachtas duly passed the Health Regulation of Termination of Pregnancy Act 2018 to legalise and regulate abortion up to 12 weeks gestation for any reason and up to viability for fatal fetal abnormality or serious health risk to the pregnant woman 63 Ageing population edit See also Pensions timebomb The first meetings on how we best respond to the challenges and opportunities of an ageing population were held on 10 11 June 2017 64 65 In May a second weekend on 8 9 July was added to the schedule 66 64 65 The assembly received 120 submissions from the public 64 The first meeting s main topics were long term care and independent living 64 It was addressed by Eamon O Shea social gerontology professor at NUI Galway 67 Pat Healy social care director at the Health Service Executive and Michael Browne of Third Age Ireland and the Citizens Information Board 68 69 The second meeting focused on pensions and retirement 70 Votes were taken on 16 questions 11 yes no questions and 5 multiple choice 71 Votes edit Yes no results of 78 votes cast on Citizens Assembly questions dealing with population ageing 71 No Question Should the government Yes novote1 prioritise and implement existing policies and strategies in relation to older people 78 03 increase public resources allocated for the care of older people See also multiple choice questions 2 4 and 5 67 10 fn 4 6 expedite the current commitment to place home care for older persons on a statutory footing 77 17 extend protection regulations from residential care to other care services See also multiple choice question 8 77 19 make pension scheme mandatory additional to State pension scheme 67 10 fn 4 10 remove the anomaly between mandatory retirement age 65 and State pension age 66 75 311 abolish the mandatory retirement age 67 1112 benchmark the State pension to average earnings 69 913 mandate greater transparency in private pension fees 78 014 backdate the Homemakers Scheme to 1973 fn 5 68 1015 enhance State support for family carers 77 1Multiple choice questions edit Assembly members could distribute votes among multiple answers to the multiple choice questions except question 2 Question 2 In general who should be principally responsible for providing required care for older people Person or family totally 1 Person or family mainly 47 State mainly 25 State totally 5 fn 6 Question 4 Where do you believe additional funding for care of older people should primarily be spent Residential care 122 Home care 198 Community based integrated housing 186Question 5 Where do you believe overall funding for care of older people should come from General taxation 215 Compulsory social insurance 255 Private insurance 115 Public private cost sharing 150Question 8 If the Government were to decide to extend regulation to other health and care services for older people what other services do you believe should be regulated Respite care 70 Day care 68 Home care 72 Supported housing 71Question 16 When considering how we respond to the challenges and opportunities of an ageing population which of these suggestions do you believe are the most important to implement responsibility for older people should be formally delegated to a dedicated Minister of State for Older People 72 dedicated information service for older people 71 ensure that older people have a stronger voice in determining their own care needs 69 stronger governmental leadership in relation to the prioritisation of the health and social care needs of older people 65 encourage non financial intergenerational transfers 57 Assisted Decision Making Capacity Act 2015 fn 7 and elder abuse prevention 72On 15 May 2019 Jim Daly the Minister of State for Mental Health and Older People gave a written Dail response in relation to those recommendations within the remit of the Department of Health 74 Climate change edit One meeting on climate change was planned for the weekends starting 30 September and 4 November 2017 the second was added to the schedule on 17 July 75 Speakers included the chair of the advisory group for a promised National Dialogue on Climate Change 75 76 Recommendations all passed by at least 80 of members included empowering an independent body to address climate change Greenhouse gas GHG tax including carbon tax and agricultural GHG tax encouragement of climate change mitigation electric vehicles public transport forests organic farming and natural peat bogs reduction of food waste microgeneration of electricity ending subsidy of peat extraction increasing bus lanes cycle lanes and park and ride facilities 77 The Oireachtas responded to the report by establishing a Joint Committee on Climate Action which published its own report on 29 March 2019 78 On 9 May 2019 the Dail endorsed the committee s report and symbolically declared a climate and biodiversity emergency 79 80 The motion also requested a Citizen s Assembly to study the biodiversity loss emergency and how the state can improve its response 80 A government action plan on climate change followed on 17 June 2019 81 Referendums edit See also Referendums in Ireland On the weekend of 13 14 January 2018 the Assembly considered the manner in which referendums are held Recommendations included 82 replacing the ad hoc Referendum Commission with a permanent Electoral Commission which would be obliged to give its view on significant matters of factual or legal dispute that arise during a referendum campaign in the public domain including on social media giving equal public money to both sides in referendum campaigns imposing spending limits for registered parties and advocacy groups and prohibiting anonymous donations to these groups allowing multiple referendums on the same day as at present 41 7 preferred a maximum of two simultaneously allowing for preferendums with more than two yes no options in which case 52 preferred single transferable vote would be used to determine the outcome allowing citizens initiatives for bringing questions either to the Oireachtas or to a referendumThe Assembly considered measures to increase voter turnout It supported early voting weekend voting postal voting online voting lowering the voting age to 16 and allowing nonresidents to vote for up to five years after emigrating It opposed compulsory voting 82 Fixed term parliaments edit The meeting on fixed term parliaments was scheduled for the weekend of 3 4 March but because of Storm Emma was postponed until 14 15 April 83 The issue was added to the assembly s remit at the insistence of Shane Ross of the Independent Alliance during negotiations on forming the government 84 There were eight public submissions including one from the Green Party in favour of the UK system embodied in the Fixed term Parliaments Act 2011 84 With 71 members present the assembly voted 36 35 in favour fixed terms 39 27 for 4 rather than 5 years as the term 63 3 in favour of allowing the term to be cut short subject to certain conditions 85 Whose approval is needed for an early general election Assembly votes 85 Approval by Yes No Not statedCabinet 39 20 12Dail simple majority 29 27 15Dail supermajority 40 17 14President 46 9 16Gender equality edit In 2019 the Irish government announced two further Citizens Assemblies including gender equality 86 This assembly was tasked with exploring and within 6 months making recommendations on barriers that facilitate gender discrimination towards girls and boys women and men removing gender related economic inequalities reassess the economic value placed traditional women s work women s full participation in workplace and political considering the gender imbalance in care and gender imbalance in low pay sectors 87 Former Secretary General of the European Commission Catherine Day was appointed as chair 87 Assessments editIn November 2016 David Van Reybrouck commended the Citizens Assembly and the predecessor Constitutional Convention as models that other European countries could usefully imitate which could counter the rise of populism 88 89 A 2019 editorial in The Irish Times said that the Citizens Assembly s work on abortion was a great success that paved the way for the resolution of a potentially contentious social issue and a vital step on the road to generating support for constitutional change 16 Footnotes edit The fourth and fifth topics were covered by a single report submitted on 21 June 2018 6 A response was still outstanding on 9 April 2019 7 Includes abstentions and invalid votes a b c d e f Members also voted by 60 to 23 that a distinction should not be drawn between the physical and mental health of the woman 52 a b One invalid vote The Homemakers Scheme makes it easier for those who provide full time care to an incapacitated person to qualify for a State pension As of December 2016 update the maximum backdating is to the scheme s 1994 introduction 72 This value is missing from the source document but can be back calculated from the other values The Assisted Decision Making Capacity Act 2015 is the framework for assisting those with impaired capacity to make life decisions such as via advance healthcare directives and enduring power of attorney 73 References editSources edit Questions Citizens Assembly Dail Eireann debates KildareStreet com 4 October 2016 Retrieved 5 October 2016 Citizens Assembly Department of the Taoiseach Retrieved 14 October 2016 Citations edit Baile Home Official website Citizens Assembly Retrieved 20 February 2020 The Irish Citizens Assembly Project www citizenassembly ie Retrieved 26 December 2020 Convention on the Constitution Citizens Assembly a b c d e f g h Citizens Assembly Motion Seanad debates KildareStreet com 15 July 2016 Retrieved 27 July 2016 a b c d Government appoints Chairperson to Citizens Assembly MerrionStreet Press release 27 July 2016 Retrieved 28 July 2016 Final Report on Manner in which Referenda are Held amp Fixed Term Parliaments PDF Citizens Assembly 21 June 2018 Retrieved 17 June 2019 Question 626 Referendum Campaigns Parliamentary Questions 32nd Dail Oireachtas 9 April 2019 Retrieved 17 June 2019 Ninth Report Conclusions and final recommendations Convention on the Constitution March 2014 Archived from the original PDF on 20 March 2016 Retrieved 27 July 2016 Written Answers No 69 Constitutional Convention Recommendations Dail Eireann Debate 17 May 2015 Vol 909 No 1 p 53 Retrieved 27 July 2016 Kenny Enda 9 June 2015 Constitutional Convention Recommendations Continued Dail Eireann debates Retrieved 27 November 2015 While there was unanimous support for a second convention in the Convention s final report it was acknowledged that this is an exercise that can only be achieved once in the lifetime of any Dail Hand Lise 27 November 2015 Taoiseach denies rift with Fine Gael deputy leader Minister Reilly over abortion referendum Irish Independent Retrieved 27 November 2015 Kenny would call forum on abortion if re elected RTE News RTE ie 27 November 2015 Retrieved 27 November 2015 A Programme for a Partnership Government PDF Government of Ireland 11 May 2016 p 153 Retrieved 1 June 2016 a b c Citizens Assembly Motion Dail debates KildareStreet com 13 July 2016 Retrieved 27 July 2016 Citizens Assemblies Bill 2019 Second Stage Seanad Eireann 25th Seanad debates Oireachtas 4 July 2019 Retrieved 8 July 2019 a b The Irish Times view on citizens assemblies out sourcing political decisions The Irish Times 14 June 2019 Retrieved 14 June 2019 a b c Leahy Pat 24 April 2017 Who exactly are the citizens in the Citizens Assembly The Irish Times Retrieved 27 April 2017 Dail debates 4 October 2016 these 99 citizens and their 99 substitutes a b Written answers Citizens Assembly Dail debates KildareStreet com 19 July 2016 Retrieved 27 July 2016 a b Electoral Amendment No 2 Bill Seanad debates KildareStreet com 15 July 2016 Retrieved 27 July 2016 Written answers Citizens Assembly Dail debates KildareStreet com 21 June 2016 Retrieved 27 July 2016 a b More details emerge about Citizens Assembly RTE News RTE ie 10 September 2016 Retrieved 10 September 2016 Electoral Amendment Act 2016 Irish Statute Book Attorney General of Ireland 24 July 2016 Retrieved 10 August 2016 a b c d e Citizens Assembly to discuss Eighth Amendment RTE ie 15 October 2016 Retrieved 15 October 2016 Bray Allison 21 February 2018 Recruiter for Citizens Assembly suspended after replacement members enlisted through personal contacts and not randomly Irish Independent Retrieved 21 February 2018 Written answers Citizens Assembly Dail debates KildareStreet com 12 July 2016 Retrieved 27 July 2016 About the Secretariat the Citizens Assembly Archived from the original on 16 February 2020 Retrieved 23 January 2020 a b Leahy Pat 16 December 2016 Over 4 500 submissions on abortion made to Citizens Assembly The Irish Times Retrieved 16 December 2016 Select Committee on Finance Public Expenditure and Reform and Taoiseach 30 June 2016 Estimates for Public Services 2016 Vote 2 Department of the Taoiseach Revised Oireachtas Joint and Select Committees KildareStreet com Retrieved 27 July 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Dail debates 4 October 2016 A total of 2 million has been set aside by my own Department for the citizen s assembly Department of An Taoiseach Citizens Assembly Dail Written answers kildarestreet com 26 March 2019 Retrieved 18 June 2019 Dail debates 4 October 2016 The assembly s inaugural meeting will be an introductory session to allow the members of the assembly the opportunity to meet the chairperson and one another and to gain a better understanding of the context for the work that they will be undertaking a b Citizens Assembly s first meeting set for October RTE ie 21 September 2016 Retrieved 21 September 2016 a b c Murphy Darragh Peter 21 September 2016 The Citizens Assembly will take place on Saturday 15 October in Dublin Castle TheJournal ie Retrieved 5 October 2016 Live Webcast Citizens Assembly Retrieved 15 October 2016 Citizens Assembly Motion Dail debates KildareStreet com 3 October 2017 Retrieved 22 March 2018 Citizens Assembly Motion Seanad debates KildareStreet com 3 October 2017 Retrieved 22 March 2018 Citizens Assembly Motion Dail debates KildareStreet com 21 March 2018 Retrieved 22 March 2018 Citizens Assembly Motion Seanad debates KildareStreet com 21 March 2018 Retrieved 22 March 2018 a b Meetings Calendar of Dates PDF Official website Citizens Assembly Retrieved 14 October 2016 Dail debates 4 October 2016 The assembly will meet again in late November at which time it will commence its consideration of the first item referred to it by the Dail resolution that is the eighth amendment of the Constitution Dail debates 4 October 2016 I think we will have a special Oireachtas committee on that Establishment of a Special Joint Committee on the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution Motion Dail debates KildareStreet com 4 April 2017 Retrieved 5 April 2017 Establishment of Special Committee on the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution Motion Seanad debates Oireachtas 13 April 2017 Retrieved 13 April 2017 a b Fifth Meeting of the Citizens Assembly on the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution Citizens Assembly 23 April 2017 Retrieved 23 April 2017 O Connor Wayne 16 October 2016 Kenny tells new Citizens Assembly of online risks Sunday Independent Retrieved 16 October 2016 Topical Issue Debate Citizens Assembly Dail Eireann debates Oireachtas 22 November 2016 pp 32 33 Retrieved 23 November 2016 a b c d Government parties block abortion bill vote amid fears it would split the Government BreakingNews ie 25 October 2016 Retrieved 25 October 2016 Private Members Business PDF Dail Eireann Order papers 68 Oireachtas 1413 25 October 2016 Retrieved 25 October 2016 22 Thirty fifth Amendment of the Constitution Repeal of the Eighth Amendment Bill 2016 Second Stage Katherine Zappone to vote against motion to repeal constitutional ban on abortion Irish Independent 16 October 2016 Retrieved 16 October 2016 Thirty fifth Amendment of the Constitution Repeal of the Eighth Amendment Bill 2016 Second Stage Private Members Dail debates Oireachtas 25 October 2016 pp 17 18 Retrieved 27 November 2016 a b Assembly receives more than 13 000 submissions RTE ie 22 December 2016 Retrieved 22 December 2016 Leahy Pat 16 December 2016 Citizens Assembly deluged with abortion submissions The Irish Times Retrieved 19 December 2016 a b 17 Advocacy Groups to Address Citizens Assembly on the Topic of Eighth Amendment Citizens Assembly 21 February 2017 Retrieved 27 February 2017 Citizens Assembly votes to give power to Oireachtas regarding abortion Irish Examiner 22 April 2017 Retrieved 23 April 2017 a b c Fifth Meeting on the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution Ballot 4B Results PDF Official website Citizens Assembly 23 April 2017 Retrieved 23 April 2017 Minihan Mary 29 April 2017 Was Citizens Assembly best way to deal with abortion question The Irish Times Retrieved 1 May 2017 The Citizens Assembly Publishes Report and Recommendations on the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution Press release Citizens Assembly 29 June 2017 Retrieved 29 June 2017 Staines Michael 29 June 2017 Citizens Assembly report on Eighth Amendment delivered to government Newstalk Dublin Retrieved 29 June 2017 Joint Committee on the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution 11 July 2017 Consideration of Recommendations of Citizens Assembly Agreed Proposals for Committee s Work Plan PDF Oireachtas Retrieved 28 July 2017 a b c d e f Engagement with Ms Justice Mary Laffoy Citizens Assembly Joint Committee on the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution 20 September 2017 Retrieved 21 September 2017 Opening Statement by Ms Justice Mary Laffoy Chair Citizens Assembly PDF Eighth Amendment of the Constitution Presentations Oireachtas 20 September 2017 Retrieved 21 September 2017 a b Laffoy keen to see certainty over Eighth Amendment RTE ie 20 September 2017 Retrieved 21 September 2017 Murray Shona 21 September 2017 Citizens assembly failed to adequately consider use of abortion pills Irish Independent Retrieved 21 September 2017 Committee on the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution 32nd Dail 25th Seanad Houses of the Oireachtas Oireachtas 27 May 2019 Retrieved 17 June 2019 Joint Committee on the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution December 2017 Report PDF Oireachtas 2 19 2 24 2 37 2 40 Retrieved 22 May 2018 Harris Simon 17 January 2018 Speech by Mr Simon Harris TD Minister for Health Report of the Joint Committee on the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution Dail Eireann Department of Health Retrieved 20 January 2018 In 2016 3 265 Irish women travelled to the UK alone and we know that Irish women travel to other countries like the Netherlands too Health Regulation of Termination of Pregnancy Act 2018 Irish Statute Book Attorney General of Ireland 20 December 2018 Retrieved 10 January 2019 Unplanned pregnancy Citizens Information Board 29 January 2019 Abortion Retrieved 17 June 2019 a b c d Ring Evelyn 10 June 2017 Independent living on Citizens Assembly agenda Irish Examiner Retrieved 12 June 2017 a b How we best respond to challenges and opportunities of an ageing population The Citizens Assembly Retrieved 12 June 2017 Citizens Assembly will Meet for Additional Weekend on Topic of Ageing Press release The Citizens Assembly 17 May 2017 Retrieved 12 June 2017 Prof Eamon O Shea Our Research NUI Galway Retrieved 12 June 2017 Dr Michael Browne People Third Age Retrieved 12 June 2017 McGarry Patsy 12 June 2017 Spending on elderly cut by third since 2009 Citizens Assembly hears The Irish Times Retrieved 12 June 2017 Second Meeting on How We Best Respond to the Challenges and Opportunities of an Ageing Population Citizens Assembly 9 July 2017 Retrieved 10 July 2017 a b Composite Results Table PDF Citizens Assembly 9 July 2017 Archived from the original PDF on 1 November 2020 Retrieved 10 July 2017 Homemakers Scheme Department of Social Protection 15 November 2016 Retrieved 10 July 2017 Assisted Decision Making Capacity Act 2015 Legislation amp Law Reform Department of Justice and Equality 2016 Retrieved 28 July 2017 Assisted Decision Making Capacity Act 2015 Irish Statute Book 30 December 2015 Retrieved 28 July 2017 Department of Health No 144 Citizens Assembly Dail Written answers kildarestreet com 15 May 2019 Retrieved 18 June 2019 a b The Citizens Assembly Will Meet For Additional Weekend On Topic Of Climate Change Press release Citizens Assembly 19 July 2017 Retrieved 27 July 2017 Minister Denis Naughten publishes Ireland s first statutory National Mitigation Plan Press release Department of Communications Climate Action and Environment 19 July 2017 Retrieved 27 July 2017 How the State can make Ireland a leader in tackling climate change Citizens Assembly Retrieved 22 March 2018 Committee on Climate Action 32nd Dail 25th Seanad Houses of the Oireachtas 17 June 2019 Retrieved 17 June 2019 Hennessy Michelle 10 May 2019 What does the Dail s declaration of a climate emergency actually mean TheJournal ie Retrieved 17 June 2019 a b Opposition calls for declaration of climate and biodiversity emergency Green News Ireland 9 May 2019 Retrieved 5 November 2019 Citizens Assembly Parliamentary Questions 32nd Dail Oireachtas 21 May 2019 Retrieved 17 June 2019 Lee George 17 June 2019 Wind farms electric cars meters in Govt plan RTE News Retrieved 17 June 2019 a b Manner in which referenda are held Citizens Assembly Retrieved 22 March 2018 Citizens Assembly Motion Dail Eireann 32nd Dail Houses of the Oireachtas 21 March 2018 Retrieved 17 June 2019 a b Duffy Ronan 14 April 2018 Only eight people and one party gave their view on whether we should have a fixed term Dail TheJournal ie Retrieved 17 June 2019 a b Meeting of the Assembly on Fixed Term Parliaments Results PDF Citizens Assembly Retrieved 12 June 2019 Hennessy Michelle 12 June 2019 We re falling very far short Citizens Assembly on gender equality to start work in autumn TheJournal ie Retrieved 12 June 2019 a b Dr Catherine Day appointed as the Chair of the new Citizens Assembly Humphreys Joe 27 November 2016 Why Ireland s citizens assembly is a model for Europe The Irish Times Retrieved 30 November 2016 Van Reybrouck David 19 November 2016 We have one year to make democracy work in Europe Or else the Trumps take over De Correspondent Retrieved 27 July 2017 External links editOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Citizens 27 Assembly Ireland amp oldid 1216069462 Gender equality, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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