Galway East result: Yes 60.19% and No 39.81%

All three of the constituency’s TDs were supporters of the No campaign

There was great delight from the Yes side as soon as their tallies began to indicate a local result in excess of 60 per cent. Photograph: Charles McQuillan/Getty Images)
There was great delight from the Yes side as soon as their tallies began to indicate a local result in excess of 60 per cent. Photograph: Charles McQuillan/Getty Images)

Three in every five voters called for a Yes vote in Galway East as the constituency voted overwhelmingly in favour of repealing the Eight Amendment of the Constitution.

The count centre in Headford was the first to return its official results figures, with 26,525 of the 44,192 votes cast in favour of the amendment to the Constitution.

The No vote was 17,546 (39.7 per cent) while there were 121 spoiled votes (0.27 per cent). The official turnout was 44,192 voters (63.46 per cent).

Returning officer, Derry Buckley, delivered the result to the sparse crowd in attendance, which by the time of the official announcement appeared to be entirely made up of Yes campaigners.

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One of the highest Yes votes came from the town of Kinvara, which delivered 72.82 per cent Yes according to tallies, while Loughrea (66.42 per cent), Tuam (61.93 per cent) and Athenry (59.65 per cent) all returned comprehensive Yes votes. Only 11 of the 119 boxes tallied delivered a No vote.

All three of Galway East’s TDs, Ciarán Cannon (Fine Gael), Anne Rabbitte (Fianna Fáil) and Sean Canney (Independent) were advocates of the No campaign, and none of the three were present in Headford at the count centre by the time the result was announced.

There was great delight from the Yes side as soon as their tallies began to indicate a local result in excess of 60 per cent and according to Aoife Moore, spokesperson for Galway East Together for Yes, their hard work had paid off.

“Galway East is a very hard constituency with three TDs who are ‘No’. We didn’t get any guidance from them,” said Ms Moore.

“On the doors in the last two weeks we had a 45 per cent ‘Yes’ and the ‘No’ held steady at 25 to 27 per cent.

“If you looked at the maths and took out the undecideds it predicted the result but we never ever took anything for granted. We knew we had a battle on our hands.”