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Friday September 20, 2013 16:14
by nmn
The coming referendum on the abolishment of Seanad Éireann would, if passed, remove the existing constitutional right of the President to refer proposed Bills to the people for a referendum. It would pass the initial responsibility of passing Bills into law onto the Dáil alone - a dangerous development, particularly where any ruling party might hold an overall majority.
A vote to abolish the Seanad would in fact pass most law making decisions that impact upon the people to the Dáil alone, passing such responsibility to a single parliamentary body, thus removing existing safeguards meant to protect against the introduction of unconstitutional or politically or otherwise motivationally biased law.
Related Links:
How much would we save by abolishing the Seanad?
Very cynical misleading FG posters?
A History of Iniquity, II: How Irish Governments behaved unconstitutionally, serving the EU agenda |
Memo On The Unconstitutional Use Of Public Money By Irish Governments In Constitutional Referendums |
Article 136 TFEU amendment, the ESM and the Fiscal Compact Treaty |
The Irish Veto: Why a referendum on one treaty, and not on the other? |
Referenda: A Strategy for Success? |
NUI Seanad Candidates' Include Secret FFers, FGers, et al |
Ronan Mullen: Independent Senator. Liberal? |
Ireland in Crisis: Challenging the Consensus |
http://www.referendum2013.ie