RobertKK wrote: It would be nice if people could enjoy their defeat without the bitterness.
suicide_circus wrote: » Will they do loyalty cards? Every 10th abortion is free.
LuckyLloyd wrote: » She's in bits. Represents nothing about Ireland's future - 87% in her cohort rejected the outright nonsense she'd peddled in her time in the public spotlight. I'm actually annoyed she'd received such a platform, she is an irrelevant extremist.
Grayson wrote: » She opened a wing of a school I went to when she was the minister for education. She stood on the foot of one of my friends by accident and never said sorry. I've known she was a bitch since then.
retro:electro wrote: » Yes Robert it would. *toots party horn*
erica74 wrote: » *adjusts party hat and feather boa* Can you imagine the posts from him if the result had been the other way around?!
Vincent Vega wrote: » Why is this person still getting a platform? What is her expertise or relevance other than the UCD impeachment?
eviltwin wrote: » She's also said she wants to see legislation enacted as soon as possible so credit to her for that.
Sheeps wrote: » From the exit poll 52% of people felt 12 weeks abortions was too far. I hope this takes priority in the debate over coming legislation. This was the major issue with the sensible no side.
dav3 wrote: » Do you have a link for that?
Simi wrote: » It was the opposite actually, 52% in favour. So there is absolutely no reason not to implement the legislation as it was presented.
storker wrote: » I could bitch and moan about this country for...well, for Ireland, but it's heartening to see that such a divisive subject and decisive campaign appears to have resulted in a fairly unified vote i.e. rural and urban areas voting yes, cross-party support, and support across most age groups. The country doesn't often show this kind of unity outside of sporting events. Worth raising a glass to tonight!
Fr Tod Umptious wrote: » I'm not talking about the country overall, I'm talking about the constituencies the TDs mentioned represent. The Yes vote will likely be lower there than in other places, less than 50% maybe not, but less than the national.
chalkitdown1 wrote: » The people have spoken and Katie Ascough is still lying and belittling people with mental health issues live on TV. Why are RTE giving this vile woman a platform? Just because she's got a pretty face?
pleas advice wrote: » I can. And they'd be nothing like those directed at him
STB. wrote: » Most will be 60%. PLUS.
seamus wrote: » It's because there's an old boys' business network operating behind the scenes that includes big members from Opus Dei, as well as CEOs and MDs from the media including RTE and INM. This is why Iona seem to get airtime despite having no mandate, while other causes usually require a TD or other politician to pull strings to get airtime.
Grayson wrote: » The exit poll has an error margin of about 1.5%. I don't think the poll showed anywhere below 60% did it?
Chris_Heilong wrote: » Very disappointing result, it is a total disregard for basic biology and shows most Irish being happy to just be sheep and not think for them selves instead wanting to virtue signal and aspire to been what is perceived as being the cosmopolitan modern society that is bigger than what we actually are in reality. When the legalise child marriage referendum comes about I am leaving this **** hole.
Sheeps wrote: » Sorry I don't have a link for it, but it was just on RTE news about an hour or so ago. That may be correct. The point is that it's a contentious issue, which is why it deserves the most debate in the Dail.