Ireland votes on Lisbon Treaty again

Published: 2 October 2009 y., Friday

Balsavimas
On 12 June 2008, the Irish electorate voted by 53.4% to 46.6% against ratification of the Lisbon Treaty. Ireland is obliged to put any international Treaty which is deemed to have an effect on its Constitution to a referendum and it cannot ratify Lisbon without a popular Yes vote.

Following opinion polls and consultations with the Irish Houses of Parliament in December 2008, the Irish government asked other European leaders for certain assurances and guarantees on matters which were clearly important to Irish voters. In response, the European Council (heads of government) adopted a decision in June 2009 to provide guarantees that certain Irish laws will not be affected by the Lisbon Treaty in the areas of:

The right to life, family and education Taxation Security and defence The leaders formally agreed to add this decision to a future EU Treaty as a protocol. The leaders also formally agreed to activate the Lisbon Treaty provision to retain one Commissioner per Member State, once the Treaty was ratified.

In return, the Irish government agreed to put the Treaty to the Irish people once more, under these new conditions. The Irish people go to the polls to make their decision on Friday 2 October 2009.

Although the poll proper starts in Ireland at 7 a.m. on Friday, 2 October, voting in the Lisbon Treaty Referendum began on 30 September 2009 for the almost 800 voters living on islands off the Donegal coast in the north-west of Ireland. They will be followed on 1 October by 2,000 people living on islands off the Galway, Mayo and Cork coasts. People living in the islands vote ahead of the rest of the country because of the risk of being cut off by bad weather.

Voting stops at 10 p.m. on Friday but the counting is manual and does not begin until Saturday morning, 3 October.  First results will be known during that morning and the count can be followed online at the State broadcaster www.RTE.ie as well as at www.referendum.ie. The final result should be known on Saturday evening.

Over 500 television crews, radio and print journalists and bloggers from all over the world have received accreditation to attend the count in Dublin Castle. This includes over 160 Irish journalists. Most of the rest are from other EU countries with Germany and the UK being among the best represented.

 

Šaltinis: ec.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

A step forward for Serbia's relations with the EU

Parliament approved on Wednesday the EU-Serbia Stabilisation and Association Agreement, which needed the EP's consent as well as ratification by all Member States to enter into force. more »

Haiti: fragility of the state and political crisis worry MEPs

One year after the earthquake, Haiti is still in chaos, an emergency situation where rebuilding has barely begun, say MEPs in a resolution adopted on Wednesday. more »

Consumers: Cheaper, faster, easier ways to settle disputes without going to court

A Greek consumer was charged by his bank twice while shopping in London. A Greek ADR led to the bank refunding the second charge to the consumer. more »

EU humanitarian aid needs more funding and better co-ordination, say MEPs

The EU's humanitarian aid capability should be stepped up, by creating a European civil protection force, boosting funding and ensuring a clear division of labour between military and humanitarian bodies in crisis areas, says Parliament in a resolution voted on Tuesday. more »

Strong EU farm policy needed to deliver affordable food

To secure supplies of affordable food, the EU must have a strong farm policy that discourages food commodity speculation and helps more young farmers to start up, said Parliament on Tuesday. more »

Commission and UNCHR in act of support for Yemen's forgotten humanitarian crisis

The Commissioner for International Cooperation, Humanitarian Aid and Crisis Response Kristalina Georgieva arrives in Yemen today, together with António Guterres, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. more »

EU and Serbia sign bilateral WTO accession agreement

The EU and Serbia have today signed a bilateral agreement on Serbia's accession to the WTO. more »

2011 EU-China Year of Youth: new horizons for cooperation and dialogue

Androulla Vassiliou, Commissioner for Education, Culture, Multilingualism and Youth and Wang Xiao, President of the All-China Youth Federation, will open the EU-China Year of Youth in Brussels today, in the presence of 200 young people from the EU and China. more »

Financial, Economic and Social Crisis Committee visits Portugal and Spain

The European Parliament's Special Committee on the Financial, Economic and Social Crisis will visit Lisbon and Madrid on 11 - 13 January to assess the impact of the debt crisis and debate possible ways out with national politicians, economic stakeholders, industry and social partners. more »

Australia floods swamp more towns

Flash floods and heavy rains wreak more havoc in Queensland. more »