Judge to rule later on bids to challenge abortion referendum result

Pair made claims on impact of Minister for Health’s Yes stance, voter registration irregularities

Joanna Jordan is seeking to bring a petition challenging the result of the abortion referendum. Photograph: Collins Courts.
Joanna Jordan is seeking to bring a petition challenging the result of the abortion referendum. Photograph: Collins Courts.

Two separate applications for permission to bring petitions challenging the result of the abortion referendum will be ruled on later by the president of the High Court.

Mr Justice Peter Kelly reserved judgment on Friday at the conclusion of the hearing of an application for permission brought by Joanna Jordan, a homemaker, of Upper Glenageary Road, Dún Laoghaire.

Her application was heard following the conclusion on Thursday of one brought by Charles Byrne, a piano teacher and musician, of College Rise, Drogheda, Co Louth. Judgment was also reserved on that.

Charles Byrne is seeking to bring a petition challenging the result of the abortion referendum. Photograph: Collins Courts.
Charles Byrne is seeking to bring a petition challenging the result of the abortion referendum. Photograph: Collins Courts.

Before a petition can be brought, the Referendum Act requires the court to find that the intended petitioner has prima facie evidence of matters likely to have a “material effect” on the referendum as a whole. The State argues that neither Mr Byrne nor Ms Jordan have met those criteria.

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Both intended petitioners have alleged irregularities in the conduct of the referendum and registration of voters and have also complained about statements made by Taoiseach Leo Varadkar and Minister for Health Simon Harris during the campaign.

Accurate

Mr Byrne also alleged the Referendum Commission failed to meet its statutory obligations in relation to providing fair and accurate information in its guide and website. The commission denied those claims.

In closing submissions on Friday opposing Ms Jordan’s application, Frank Callanan SC, for the State, said an intended petitioner must meet a high standard for leave and must show what they complain about “materially” affected the outcome of the referendum.

To reach such a standard, one would expect some expert evidence but none was provided by Ms Jordan, he said. The “arrowhead” of her application concerned statements by Mr Harris, but she could not show those had materially affected the referendum as a whole.

Ms Jordan had not even got to the point of showing any “actual abuse” of electoral law or a violation of the McKenna principles, preventing a government spending public funds on advocating for a particular side in a referendum, he said.

While Ms Jordan relied on a number of key Supreme Court judgments, including the McKenna judgments, none of those prevent government ministers campaigning for either side in the ordinary way in a referendum, he said.

The prohibition was ministers cannot use public monies to do so and the McKenna judgments could not be read as intending to have a “freezing effect” on policy or legislation.

Irregularity

In his closing reply for Ms Jordan, counsel Killian McMorrow said an intended petitioner is not required to show the irregularity they complain of would have altered the result. It was adequate to establish doubt about the outcome, he argued.

While he was instructed there would be expert evidence called by Ms Jordan if she got leave for a petition, they were not required to produce such evidence, he submitted.

The State had labelled his side’s evidence as “disparate and random” but there is a structure to what was exhibited concerning the Minister for Health’s role, he said.

That included the Minister having appeared with medical personnel at Yes campaign events and having discussed Department of Health matters at such events. The Minister had a "parallel and continuous" role during the campaign and at events and had himself said: "I threw everything I had at it".

Eight days before the May 25th vote, the Minister had called on resources of his department to assist Yes campaign arguments that abortion would be rare, legal and safe, counsel said.

This was in “direct response” to arguments by the No campaign that a vote for repeal would lead to very significant numbers of abortions.

Mr Harris did not appear as a Fine Gael politician in the campaign but rather appeared as "Simon Harris, Minister for Health", he said. There was "very little" campaigning by Fine Gael.

Mary Carolan

Mary Carolan

Mary Carolan is the Legal Affairs Correspondent of the Irish Times