The General Election is to be on Friday 26 February 2016.
The Mid-West Humanists suggest that voters who favour a secular society ask General Election candidates if they support the following changes to enable a Secular Society.
You can download the Mid-West Humanists’ leaflets from our Aims and Media page, if you wish to give a leaflet to a candidate.
You can read the particular Acts mentioned, and the Constitution, on the Irish Statute Book online.
Top Priority Changes
Secular Education
Does the candidate agree to vote for the following new laws, or to support the Minister for Education changing the regulations: –
- Repeal Section 7(3)(c) of the Equal Status Act 2000. At present, this states that a school giving education in an environment that promotes religious values can prefer to take a child with a particular religion over others. If this section were repealed, Section 7(2) would prohibit discrimination in a school under the 9 grounds described in Section 2 of the Act. Religion or its absence is one of the 9 grounds.
- Amend Section 37(1) of the Employment Equality Act 1998. At present it allows an employer to prefer a job candidate over another candidate in a way similar to the Equal Status Act (above), if the employer is a religious, educational, or medical institution. Ask that “educational, or medical” be removed, and that “religious” as applied to an institution be defined strictly as when the institution’s only purpose is a religious purpose.
- Amend Section 15(2)(b) of the Education Act 1998 so that schools would not be required to have their own “characteristic spirit” (you may hear people speak of “ethos”), and that instead all schools would be required to respect the human rights of children.
- That the Minister for Education and Skills would send a circular letter to all National Schools, directing that Rule 69(b,c,d,e) in the Rules for National Schools 1965 is still in force, and thus that National Schools must follow the System of National Education (as each National School’s Lease directs). Rule 69 and the schools’ leases require that a pupil must not receive, nor be present at, any religious instruction of which the child’s parents or guardian have not approved; and that the timetable must make it easy for children to be absent from the school during such instruction.
Constitution
Does the candidate agree to vote for a referendum to let us the people decide the following: –
- Remove the sentence that makes Blasphemy an offence – Article 40.6.1.i, 3rd paragraph.
- Remove mention of a god from the declaration on starting work as a judge (Article 34.5.1), as President (Article 12.8), or one of the Council of State (Article 31.4). Tell the candidate that to give a judge a choice of a declaration with god and a declaration without god would be a mistake – judges would be marked as religious or not religious and some parties in court cases would see them as biased. Tell the candidate you seek one declaration with no mention of a god.
Other secular changes
Secular Health Services
Does the candidate agree to vote for new laws, or to support the Minister for Health changing regulations, so that all hospitals and professionals that receive public money to provide health services for people (which is generally without any reference to the religion of a patient) must provide all treatments that are within the law? This would stop hospitals, doctors, or pharmacists refusing to provide, for example, certain forms of birth control, by saying it is contrary to their ethics.
Constitution
Does the candidate agree to vote for a referendum to let us the people decide the following: –
- Remove Article 40.3.3 (the 8th Amendment, that prohibits nearly all terminations of pregnancy)
This request, like the other requests for referenda, does not mean that either you as a voter or the candidate (if elected) would vote for removal on referendum day. In asking the candidate for a referendum, you are only asking for reasonable democracy.
- Remove the following words that involve god and religion
- Remove words about the Trinity and Jesus Christ from the Preamble.
- Remove power deriving under God from Article 6.
- Remove homage, worship, reverence, respect due to God, that is, remove Article 44.1.
- Remove the glory of god (glóire Dé) from the Epilogue.
You can read the particular Acts mentioned, and the Constitution, on the Irish Statute Book online.
You can download the Mid-West Humanists’ leaflets from our Aims and Media page, if you wish to give a leaflet to a candidate.
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