Monday 13th April 2015: Thank you for coming this morning. I want to give you details of the Referendum Commission’s public information campaign on the referendums on Marriage, and on the Age of Presidential candidates.
I am Kevin Cross, the Chairperson of the Referendum Commission that has been established in relation to the referendums. The other members of the Commission here today are the Comptroller and Auditor General Seamus McCarthy; the Ombudsman Peter Tyndall; the Clerk Assistant of the Dáil Peter Finnegan; and the Clerk of the Seanad Deirdre Lane. As you know the Commission is an independent body established by law to explain the referendum proposals and to encourage people to vote.
The referendums are taking place on May 22nd. There has been considerable public discussion on the referendum on marriage, while there has been much less debate on the referendum on lowering the minimum age for Presidential candidates from 35 to 21. It is important that over the next five and a half weeks voters understand that there are two separate referendums, they will be given a ballot paper dealing with each of them on polling day, and they can vote on each separately, yes or no.
Our job as the Referendum Commission is to help explain these proposals in a neutral way, and to encourage people to vote.
There is a full explanation of each referendum proposal on our website and in our Guide which has been circulated to you. I will just refer briefly to them now.
In respect of the marriage referendum, voters can vote yes or no to this proposal, which is to include a new clause about marriage in the Constitution. If the referendum is passed two people of the same sex will be able to marry each other, just as two people of the opposite sex may marry. A marriage between two people of the same sex will have the same status under the Constitution as a marriage between a man and a woman.
In respect of the Age of Presidential Candidates referendum, voters can vote yes or no to the proposal, which is to reduce the age at which candidates are eligible to run for President from 35 to 21.
The role of the Referendum Commission as set out in law is to give a general explanation of the subject matter of the referendum proposals. Our Guide to the referendum proposals is currently being printed and distribution to about two million households in the State will begin near the end of April. We will also be producing formats of the Guide in Braille, in Irish Sign Language and in easier-to-understand format for people with intellectual disabilities. The explanation of the referendum proposals in the Guide is also available now on our website refcom.ie. We will be running an extensive advertising campaign in all media seeking to explain the proposals and encouraging people to vote.
The most urgent thing for people to deal with now is to check that they are on the electoral register. At every election and referendum there are many thousands of people who are entitled to vote, but can’t vote because they are not registered. There are also many people who have moved house but remain registered at their old address, and this only comes to mind on polling day.
Our message today is that everyone entitled to vote has until close of business on May 5th to put that right. You can check the electoral register online to see if you are on it, and if your details are correct, by going to checktheregister.ie. You can also inspect the register at local authority offices, post offices, Garda stations and public libraries. To facilitate voters we have an App on Facebook through which people can check the electoral register, ensure they are on the register and that if they are they are registered it is at the right address. If they are not, the App helps them download the appropriate forms to put this right.
It takes a small amount of effort: If you are not on the register or are listed incorrectly you can download the appropriate forms online, or collect them at your local post office, library or local authority office. They must then be returned to your local authority by May 5th at the latest.
It is not our role to advocate or to put the arguments for or against the referendum proposals. Between now and May 22nd you will hear people arguing on each side of the debate. The Referendum Commission would urge voters to listen to the debate, to refer to our material for independent factual information and to make up their mind on how to vote. .
I am happy to take questions on our campaign, and the main points of the proposals. If anyone has a question on specific detail which requires legal analysis or reflection we will come back to you afterwards with a Referendum Commission response.