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Civil partners of four years Paul Higgins (left) and Richard Lucey, who have been in a relationship together for 19 years, prepare to cast their votes at their polling station in Cabra, Dublin for the referendum on gay marriage. PA WIRE
As it happened
LIVE: Ireland is the talk of the world as voters decide on same-sex marriage
We’ll be talking all things referendum here today.
6.33pm, 22 May 2015
148k
317
IT’S A HISTORIC day for Ireland as we become the first country to ask the electorate whether to allow same-sex marriage.
Have something to say about today’s referendums? Whatever way you are voting, have your say in the comments section, on Twitter @thejournal_ie or by mail tips@thejournal.ie. Feel free to send us any pics too (but just remember, no selfies in the polling booth).
22 May 2015
8:04AM
Good morning! Referendum day is finally here. After weeks of debating, Ireland goes to the polls today.
We’ll be talking all things referendum here throughout the day. It’s Sinéad O’Carroll here for the first shift. Want to join the chat? Email me at sinead@thejournal.ie or tweet @sineadocarroll.
22 May 2015
8:06AM
With 66,000 new voters on the register, there are many people out there who have never voted. We’ve put together a handy guide of what you need to know before heading to your polling station today.
Mark Stedman / Photocall Ireland
Mark Stedman / Photocall Ireland / Photocall Ireland
This was the scene at Dublin’s election warehouse in Cookstown last night. That’s the facility’s manager Michael Leonard there, getting the 627 ballot boxes prepared for Dublin West, Dublin North, Dublin Midwest, Dublin Southwest, Dublin South and Dun Laoghaire.
22 May 2015
9:12AM
Cliódhna Russell taking over here from Sinead O’Carroll, keeping you up to date with all the voting news.
22 May 2015
9:14AM
If you’ve got any great photos or something to say about the referendum let me know at cliodhna@thejournal.ie or tweet @CliodhnaRussell
Colin Farrell’s brother Eamon (on the right) with his husband Steven Mannion casting their ballot papers into ballot boxes while voting in the Marriage Referendum at the Star of the sea Sandymount polling station in Dublin this morning.
22 May 2015
10:19AM
Hello everyone, Cianan Brennan here taking over from Cliodhna. Stay tuned to keep up to date with all that’s happening as voting continues across the country.
22 May 2015
10:21AM
If you spot anything great to do with the referendum and the day that’s in it drop me a line at cianan@thejournal.ie, or tweet me @ciananbrennan
We asked you how you were planning to vote for this morning’s poll. If TheJournal.ie’s readers are anything to go by things are looking good for the Yes side…
Ireland has voting fever now that D-Day (R-Day?) has arrived, but has coverage prior to the referendum in the national media been entirely impartial?
Research by media group Newsaccess Media Intelligence suggests that the volume of Yes articles in the Irish media in the month of May have outstripped their No counterparts by a factor of three to one.
424 Yes articles were carried by ten national print titles, with 135 No pieces and a further 214 deemed Neutral.
“Unlike broadcast media, which must provide balanced coverage of referenda, the print media are not subject to such strictures and this research confirms the broad and widespread support in the Irish print media for a Yes vote”, said Laurie Mannix, managing director of MKC Communications who commissioned the research.
Hello! With just under ten hours of voting to go in today’s referendums, this is Michael Sheils McNamee taking over the liveblog. Anything to add to the conversation, email me at michaelsm@thejournal.ie or tweet to @michaelonassis.
With polling figures in last week’s Sunday papers a bit all over the place – support for the referendum ranging from 53% to 69% – people are not taking anything for granted.
However, you might be a bit more inclined to listen to the bookies’ predictions.
Paddy Power currently have a Yes result in the same-sex marriage referendum at 1/33 on. A No vote is listed at 9/1.
The turf accountant has said it predicts that over €300,000 will be taken on referendum bets across the Irish bookmaking industry.
In a statement yesterday, they said that, “from a business point of view, bookies will be hoping for the referendum to pass, as a win for the ‘No’ campaign would leave the industry in the red for a chunky six figure sum.”
With a glut of people returning to Ireland to cast their votes in the same-sex marriage and presidential age referendums, the #HomeToVote hashtag has been tweeted more than 24,000 times in the past 24 hours.
People are currently tweeting the hashtag at a rate of around 100 times a minute.
A number of high-profile people have already been out today casting their votes.
John Lyons, Labour TD for Dublin North-West, who is openly gay, was out voting at the Holy Spirit National School in Ballymun this morning with his mother, Josie Lyons.
John Lyons with his mother Josie. Mark Stedman / Photocall
Mark Stedman / Photocall / Photocall
Do you know what you’re doing tomorrow for the vote being counted?
Dublin Fianna Fáil councillor Paul McAuliffe has called on Minister for the Office of Public Works Simon Harris to open the gates of Dublin Castle, where the vote will be counted, as the results come in tomorrow afternoon.
“One of the most striking things about this campaign has been the huge number of people with no affiliation to any political party that have got involved in a political debate for the first time. It is only right that they are given a place to gather and hear the results as they come in,” he said.
Dublin Castle Shutterstock / Matej Hudovernik
Shutterstock / Matej Hudovernik / Matej Hudovernik
Find yourself confused staring at the ballot paper this morning?
If only there was some clever way of redesigning them to make them clearer…
Unfortunately, this is NOT the ballot paper you'll be using today Each and OtherEach and Other
The Dublin-based UX agency Each and Other has done up an alternative to today’s ballot paper, pointing out that it facilitates, “one of the most important interactions between government and its citizens. It’s the interface through which citizens decide the type of society they want to live in.”
These Carmelite sisters were out earlier this morning casting their votes in Malahide, Co Dublin.
AP Photo / Peter Morrison
AP Photo / Peter Morrison / Peter Morrison
22 May 2015
1:46PM
Hello there! This is Christina Finn taking over the liveblog. Want to get in touch and join the conversation today, email me at christinafinn@thejournal.ie or tweet to @christinafinn8
Reports from around the country indicate that turnout is steady today. Do you know what referendum had the highest turnout by voters? It wasn’t recently.
When Tánaiste Joan Burton came into to TheJournal.ie offices to talk about the referendum earlier this week, she encouraged voters to take a selfie OUTSIDE the polling station after they’ve voted:
While we couldn’t get access to that particularly amazing selfie, we did get this nice snap from outside her polling station at St Joseph’s School in Cabra:
For those on the hunt for some tunes as they head out to have their say this afternoon – or just wind up for the commute home – Filtr Ireland has put together this Spotify playlist.
Only a quarter of all voters casting their ballots so far, but with over six hours still to go until polls close there’s plenty of time left for people to make their way to the booths.
The referendum response from the Irish abroad has been, in a word, epic.
The hashtag HomeToVote has been trending all over the world as those either living or on holiday overseas flood back into the country to cast their ballots, including from as far afield as Bangkok and Mozambique.
It’s Michelle Hennessy here now, taking over the reins of the liveblog. If you have something to say, feel free to send me an email to michelle@thejournal.ie or you can tweet at @michellehtweet.
If you think you are too busy to get out and vote this evening, check out this couple on their special day.
Vincent Fox and Anne Cole got married today, but they were sure to get their vote in at St James Primary School in Dublin 8. Fair play. Enjoy the rest of your day, folks.
Voter turnout in some areas is suggested to be comparable with general election turnout, with many people saying it is the first time they have ever had to queue in line to vote.
P.s. You might have noticed the website has been acting a bit funny, but it should all be okay soon. Something fell over.
22 May 2015
9:14PM
We’ll have all the latest on turnout from across the country soon on TheJournal.ie, so stay tuned, and join us tomorrow for results and reaction. Goodnight!
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@Aire Dezamba: it’s funny that so many areas there is no money for. Yet every budget , there is over an extra half billion for an already insane welfare spend …
An Garda Siochana have enough to tackle without being involved in the issues involving public transport. Ticket checks by inspectors on Dublin Bus are as rare as they’ve ever been. Anti social behaviour, drug use and dealing and fare evasion are rife on our public transport system and no Minister give a flying fcuk because they don’t use it, unless it’s first class service on Irish Rail. Meanwhile the general public run the gauntlet going about their business and hope they get home from their days work with their belonging in tack and their clothes odour free of smoke. It’s time for a dedicated transport police policy.
@Paul Linehan: I was on the luas going to Broadstone there was a ticket check on the way there and another one on the way back I returned on the red line with no sign of a check on either side.
FFS I’ve been saying it for years as it’s been everywhere else in the world for years. Fukin no brainer ideas take generations to be seen as sensible in this country.
So the only alternative is when public service vehicle’s been stoned is to make all of the Communities suffer by pulling the service? You put that against Ministerial cars been stoned you will get a swift reaction from the Garda .Two sets of rules for the same job.
Cosy relationship with the government in the top brass of the Gardaí, any attempt to usurp the elite and offer another force to compare the performance of the Gardaí will obviously be met with reluctance. Charlie Flanagan acting as a mouthpiece for those in charge of the Gardaí. Why does the article not have a quote from the Garda commissioner on this proposal?
@BreadBasketCase: harbor police were disbanded against Garda wishes. Airport police are glorified security and an Garda siochana has repeatedly called for the airport police to become a fully fledged police force.
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