In total, 951,650 (64.85 per cent of the electorate) supported the idea in a referenda held on Friday, while 515,808 (35.15 per cent) opposed it.
Welcoming the result, Taoiseach Leo Varadkar said: “It is very much part of an ongoing campaign in many ways to reform our constitution, to make it a 21st century constitution or a 21st century Republic.”
Since the 1960s, Ireland has undergone a process of social liberalisation, contrasting its strongly-Catholic and conservative past.
Ireland has voted in favour of repealing a series of laws – allowing for divorce, same-sex marriage and early stage abortion, in recent years.
Changing the law concerning blasphemy was backed by the Catholic Church but some Islamic leaders opposed it.
Since 1855, no one has been prosecuted for blasphemy in Ireland. Yet, anyone convicted could face a fine of 25,000 euros.
Blasphemy was defined as publishing or uttering something “grossly abusive or insulting in relation to matters sacred by any religion, thereby intentionally causing outrage among a substantial number of adherents of that religion”.
The referenda coincided with a…
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