Nonresident voting at Irish presidential elections
Various proposals have been considered since the 1980s to extend the franchise in Irish presidential elections to citizens resident outside the state. In 2019, the then government introduced a bill to amend the constitution to facilitate this extension. The bill lapsed in January 2020 when the 32nd Dáil was dissolved for the 2020 general election, but was restored to the order paper in July 2020.
At present, the only nonresident voting rights in Ireland are for university constituencies in Seanad Éireann and certain public servants posted abroad.
Legal background
At present, Article 12.2.2° of the Constitution of Ireland reads:Dáil Éireann is the lower house of the Oireachtas and Article 16.1.2° of the Constitution states:
The relevant law is section 8 of the Electoral Act 1992, which provides that, to be eligible for the electoral register for a given Dáil constituency, one must be:
- ordinarily resident in the constituency
- at least 18 years old
- either an Irish citizen, a British citizen, or a citizen of another EU country specified by ministerial order. The last provision allows for reciprocal agreements where Irish citizens resident in another EU country are allowed to vote in that country's legislative elections. no such agreement or ministerial order has been made.
Political background
The Irish diaspora is large and the question of voting rights for emigrants and other expatriates has arisen continually since the 1980s. The Oireachtas committee on the constitution considered the matter in 2002; it recommended no extension of the franchise, but that among the senators nominated by the Taoiseach should be "a person or persons with an awareness of emigrant issues".Constitutional Convention
The Constitutional Convention established in 2012 was directed to report on several issues, including "giving citizens resident outside the State the right to vote in Presidential elections at Irish embassies, or otherwise". It considered the matter at its plenary meeting on 28–29 September 2013 and recommended allowing expatriate citizens to vote. It made some more detailed discussions, voting as follows:- Should citizens resident outside the State have the right to vote in Presidential elections? Yes 78–21 No
- Should citizens resident in Northern Ireland have the right to vote in Presidential elections? Yes 73–20 No
| Restriction | Percentage | - | - | - | - | - |
| All Irish citizens resident outside the island of Ireland | 36 | - | - | - | - | - |
| Just citizens who have lived in Republic of Ireland | 26 | - | - | - | - | - |
Just citizens who have lived in Republic of Ireland as adults within the last...Government responseAlthough the Fine Gael–Labour coalition government was supposed to give an official response in the Dáil within four months of receiving the convention's report, it was not until January 2016 that Ann Phelan said it was "committed to undertaking … analysis" of the "complex and inter-related issues" involved in the recommendation. It had already responded in March 2015 to a European Commission communication on "the consequences of disenfranchisement of Union citizens exercising their right to free movement", saying "policy, legal and practical issues" on diaspora voting should be considered by the Minister for the Environment, Community and Local Government, the Minister for Foreign Affairs and Trade and the Minister of State with responsibility for diaspora affairs; in October 2015, Paudie Coffey said this work had begun.In 2017 the government formed after the 2016 election accepted the convention's 2013 recommendation, published a position paper listing seven options for eligibility criteria and associated implementation measures, and promised a constitutional referendum on whichever option it would select, to be held in May 2019 alongside the local elections. The seven options were:
2019 billIn February 2019, the government decided that, due to the urgency of dealing with Brexit, the referendum would be postponed until October; it also agreed that the proposal would be "an extension of the franchise to all citizens resident outside the State, including citizens resident in Northern Ireland". The text of the bill was agreed by the cabinet on 11 June, and the Thirty-ninth Amendment of the Constitution Bill 2019 was introduced in the Dáil by the Minister for Foreign Affairs and Trade Simon Coveney on 16 September 2019.The bill proposed to amend the constitution in three places:
The 2019 bill lapsed with the dissolution of the 32nd Dáil on 14 January 2020, prior to the general election on 8 February. The election manifestos of Fine Gael and Sinn Féin supported nonresident voting in Presidential elections. It was restored to the order paper in July 2020. |