Senator Gabrielle McFadden

McFadden in favour of repealing Eighth Amendment

In a speech about the Eighth Amendment, local Senator Gabrielle McFadden said she considers herself to be "both pro-life and pro-choice."

The Fine Gael representative said she was in favour of repealing the amendment, which recognises the equal right to life of a mother and her unborn child. 

She spoke on the topic in the Seanad yesterday (Wednesday), during a debate on the Report of the Joint Committee of the Eighth Amendment to the Constitution.

Senator McFadden said that, in abortion debates "we so often hear the voices of the zealots at either end of the spectrum" but that she herself "resides in the grey area between the two extremes."

"I consider myself to be both pro-life and pro-choice," she said. "I sometimes wrestle with the issues and my opinions may alter based on learning new facts or hearing new perspectives. This is not a sign of indecision; rather it is a sign that I want to make a mature and informed decision.  

"I am willing to listen to others, but I will make up my own mind," she commented.

"I believe strongly in freedom of speech and I would fight for it. But I also believe that this debate should not be confined to those who shout loudest or those with the most dogmatic positions – whichever side they are on. And I believe that this position represents the vast majority of the population in this country.

It is because I don’t believe that I have all the answers, because I believe that people should have the right to make up their own mind on this most sensitive issue, that I have come to the position of supporting the repeal of the Eighth Amendment.  Let the people decide for themselves."

She said she didn't believe this stance made her "anti-life" and she would not allow herself to be categorised as such. 

"The Eighth Amendment was passed in 1983, thirty five years ago. That means that nobody currently under the age of 52 has had an opportunity to have their say on this issue.  

"In those intervening 35 years, 165,000 Irish women have travelled abroad for a termination – that’s twice the capacity of Croke Park.  So, regardless of The Eighth Amendment, twenty Irish women a day are travelling abroad for terminations or are availing of a pill ordered on line and taken illegally and unsafely.  

"As a modern, secular republic, the time has come for us to be mature enough to take responsibility for the health and wellbeing of Irish women and girls.

There are so many complex issues involved in this debate - threats to the life or health of a woman, rape, incest, fatal foetal abnormalities, crisis pregnancy and so many others – that I do not believe we can lay down a clear black or white dogmatic position to women.  In the real world, decisions on these issues should be made by a woman, in conjunction with her doctor and her partner; not written into the constitution.

"And that is why I have decided to support the removal of the Eighth  Amendment.  The responsibility then lies on us, in a mature and caring way, to legislate; but the content of that debate is for another day.

"Today I am calling on all of the public representatives in both Houses to exercise the ultimate in democracy – and to allow the Irish people to decide," she concluded.