Twenty-third Amendment of the Constitution of Ireland

The Twenty-third Amendment of the Constitution of Ireland permitted the state to become a party to the International Criminal Court (ICC). It was effected by the Twenty-third Amendment of the Constitution Act, 2001, which was approved by referendum on 7 June 2001 and signed into law on the 27 March 2002.

Contents

Changes to the text

The State may ratify the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court done at Rome on the 17th day of July, 1998.

Overview

The Twenty-third Amendment of the Constitution was necessary because the Statute of the International Criminal Court granted to the ICC certain powers the constitution, as it stood, vested exclusively in the organs of the national government. The Twenty-third Amendment was introduced by the Fianna FáilProgressive Democrats coalition government of Bertie Ahern and was supported by every major political party. It was submitted to a referendum on the same day as the Twenty-first Amendment, which introduced a constitutional prohibition on the death penalty and was approved by the electorate, and the Twenty-fourth Amendment Bill which would have permitted the state to ratify the Treaty of Nice but was rejected by voters. Voting on the Twenty-third Amendment went 64.2% in favour and 35.8% against.

The Twenty-third Amendment followed directly after the Twenty-first Amendment. This is because, for technical reasons, there is officially no Twenty-second Amendment of the Constitution of Ireland. While the changes shown above are those made to the English language version of the constitution, constitutionally it is the Irish text that takes precedence.

Result

Twenty-third Amendment of the Constitution of Ireland referendum[1]
Choice Votes Percentage
Yes 629,234 64.22%
No 350,512 35.78%
Valid votes 979,746 98.21%
Invalid or blank votes 17,819 1.79%
Total votes 997,565 100.00%
Voter turnout 34.78%
Electorate 2,867,960

See also

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