Far-left Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar has admitted defeat in referendums on proposed changes to the Irish constitution. The Irish rejected the proposed changes to amendments stressing motherhood and traditional marriage by 73.9 percent and 67.7 percent, respectively.
Reacting to the results on War Room, The National Pulse’s Editor-in-Chief Raheem Kassam said the Irish establishment embarked on the “ultimate act of political hubris,” attempting to negate “history, God, and family” in a single blow.
Reacting to the defeat of anti-marriage, and-motherhood changes to the Irish constitution in a referendum this weekend, @RaheemKassam says the Irish establishment's failed attempt to negate "history, God, and family" was "the ultimate act of political hubris". pic.twitter.com/safaE2Uq34
— Jack Montgomery (@JackBMontgomery) March 11, 2024
Varadkar and Ireland’s other political leaders wanted to change what he called “old-fashioned, sexist language” in Ireland’s constitution. This says “[t]he State shall… endeavour to ensure that mothers shall not be obliged by economic necessity to engage in labour to the neglect of their duties in the home,” and that government must “guard with special care the institution of Marriage, on which the Family is founded, and… protect it against attack.”
The referendum asked voters to approve the removal of the language around mothers. It also sought to change the language around marriage to include other “durable relationships,” such as homosexual unions.
Varadkar conceded voters defeated his side “comprehensively,” claiming he accepts the result and will “respect it fully.”
The defeats mark a major reversal for the progressive left in Ireland, which in recent years successfully changed the Catholic-inspired constitution to allow gay marriage and abortions.