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I doubt that. And you can't say, surely, that all naturalised citizens would vote the same way: they are all individual people with individual backgrounds and their own views, the same as everybody else.HOTSPURS wrote:hmm..all Naturalized citizens wouldn't hesitate to vote 'Yes'...probably that's another reason they discourage & not allow them..
I think the Irish Government wanted a yes vote, so what you say doesn't really make sense.HOTSPURS wrote:hmm..all Naturalized citizens wouldn't hesitate to vote 'Yes'...probably that's another reason they discourage & not allow them..
Any reference for this?HOTSPURS wrote:Latest survey says the Irish love the EU & most of them feel they've only benifitted from joining the EU. They probably don't want any changes to their constitution more than EU interference? Countries like Austria & UK say they haven't gained anything but still voted 'yes'
asrpb wrote:I was almost barred from Lisbon vote
By Fiachra O'Cionnaith
Monday June 23 2008
AN RTE presenter and anti-beloved campaigner who has lived in Ireland for over a decade was almost blocked from voting in the Lisbon Treaty -- because officials claimed she wasn't Irish.
Shalini Sinha has claimed she was initially refused the right to vote last week.
The broadcaster, life-coach and journalist -- who was born in Canada and whose parents are from India -- has lived in Ireland since 1996.
And for the last three years the former presenter of Mono and Health Squad and star of Celebrity Jigs n' Reels has been a legally naturalised citizen of her adopted homeland, with the same entitlements and rights as any other person with an Irish passport.
But despite being a naturalised Irish citizen and living in the country for over a decade, when anti-beloved campaigner attempted to use her vote in the Dun Laoghaire-Rathdown electoral area at 7.45pm last Thursday, officials initially refused to count it.
evidence
Despite Shalini's insistence, passport and evidence that she was on the electoral register -- an issue she had checked twice in recent months -- officials at the south Dublin voting station repeatedly insisted she was not eligible to vote.
But after a half-hour stand-off during which the RTE presenter and Irish citizen demanded to speak to the supervisor, her legal right to vote was finally allowed, with officials at the voting station putting the mistake down to an administrative error.
Shalini went public with the situation in her column in the latest edition of multi-cultural newspaper Metro Eireann.
And speaking to the Herald today, she added that while an administrative error waw cited the situation is a worrying sign.
The RTE presenter said:"I have an Irish passport, I am on the electoral register, and I voted in the 2007 General Election, but I was at first stopped from voting last week.
"If I had an Irish name I have to say I don't believe this would have happened," Shalini told the Herald.
"I'm a very conscientious voter. I've been down before to vote, and when they told me I couldn't I was very annoyed.
"I'm sure they expected me to just walk away, but I showed them my passport and told them I wasn't going home until I was allowed to vote. If I didn't do that I don't think they would have allowed me to vote.
problem
"The problem was apparently that my name on the registration list was put down as temporary -- as 'potential European' -- in the local elections, even though I put it down as permanent. I voted in them and in the General Election last year, so why would I not be able to vote this time?
"I don't think anyone intentionally did this."
Dun Laoghaire-Rathdown County Council has confirmed that up to 30 people who turned up to vote on the treaty last Thursday week were unable to do so as they were not on the electoral register.
- Fiachra O'Cionnaith
http://www.herald.ie/national-news/i-wa ... 19156.html
Well, not really an easy mistake assuming that the person in question was on the electoral roll.kevo wrote:that's hardly news and it's ridiculous to suggest that there was some policty to discourage non-nationals to vote.
it was obviously just an admin glitch where the polling clerk thought that it was only Irish nationals (rather than Irish citizens who could vote on a referendum) - an easy mistake for anyone to make surely.
Christophe wrote:Well, not really an easy mistake assuming that the person in question was on the electoral roll.kevo wrote:that's hardly news and it's ridiculous to suggest that there was some policty to discourage non-nationals to vote.
it was obviously just an admin glitch where the polling clerk thought that it was only Irish nationals (rather than Irish citizens who could vote on a referendum) - an easy mistake for anyone to make surely.
And she is an Irish citizen and an Irish national – what is the distinction that is being drawn here between these two statuses?
You have still not explained on what you feel is the difference between and Irish citizen and and Irish national.kevo wrote:the article suggests that this person was a naturalised citizen and not a national.
Place of birth is irrelevant. A person who is an Irish citizen, regardless of how they may have acquired Irish citizenship, has equal voting rights with all other Irish citizens.kevo wrote:Haing previously worked as a polling clerk, I can easily see such a mistake happening. In European elections (and Dail elections for UK citizens) some non-Irish citizens can vote. However, in referendums, only Irish citizens can vote. I can easily see a situation where a polling clerk could misunderstand this as only Irish nationals.
People who are not eligible to vote on referendums can often be on the electoral register and when the clerk asked for ID and saw place of birth as being outside Ireland, alarm bells could have (incorrectly) start ringing.
benifa wrote:You have still not explained on what you feel is the difference between and Irish citizen and and Irish national.kevo wrote:the article suggests that this person was a naturalised citizen and not a national.
Place of birth is irrelevant. A person who is an Irish citizen, regardless of how they may have acquired Irish citizenship, has equal voting rights with all other Irish citizens.kevo wrote:Haing previously worked as a polling clerk, I can easily see such a mistake happening. In European elections (and Dail elections for UK citizens) some non-Irish citizens can vote. However, in referendums, only Irish citizens can vote. I can easily see a situation where a polling clerk could misunderstand this as only Irish nationals.
People who are not eligible to vote on referendums can often be on the electoral register and when the clerk asked for ID and saw place of birth as being outside Ireland, alarm bells could have (incorrectly) start ringing.
Could you please elaborate on this distinction you keep insinuating, between an Irish citizen and an Irish national?
Christophe wrote:I think that the distinction you are drawing is really between Irish citizens (or nationals) and Irish residents, since some non-Irish citizens who are resident in Ireland can vote in various types of elections.
there probably is no exact legal definition of nationality, maybe a lot of case law there to explain it.Christophe wrote:I don't think that answer gives a generally recognised definition of "national"... There is no such thing, for example, as "English nationality".
You are grossly incorrect. Such a mistake is unacceptable coming from a polling clerk involved in a EU referendum. Polling clerks are supposed to be instructed about this by the local polling agent (at least that's what happens in most EU countries). A clerk who makes such a mistake in a EU referendum is grossly incompetent. That's unacceptable in a civilized country.kevo wrote:it was obviously just an admin glitch where the polling clerk thought that it was only Irish nationals (rather than Irish citizens who could vote on a referendum) - an easy mistake for anyone to make surely.
She clearly was an Irish citizen, so according to EU law she has an absolute right to vote on EU referenda in Ireland. End of story.kevo wrote:the article suggests that this person was a naturalised citizen and not a national.