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Sony Xperia Z5 Premium

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Sony Xperia Z5 Premium
Parte de Sony Xperia Z
 
Información
Tipo Teléfono inteligente
Fabricante Sony
Pantalla 5,5 plg (139,7 mm) 4K UHD (3840×2160)
IPS LCD 806 ppi TRILUMINOS™ Display with Live Color LED
X-Reality Engine for Mobile
Dynamic Contrast Enhancer
Interfaz de entrada Multitáctil
Teclas físicas
Pantalla táctil capacitiva
Sensor de proximidad
RAM 3 GB LPDDR4 RAM
Procesador Octa-core (2.0 GHz Quad-core Cortex-A57 &
1.5 GHz Quad-core Cortex-A53) 64-bit 20 nm
Fecha de lanzamiento

Presentación: 5 de noviembre de 2015 (9 años y 10 días)


Disponibilidad:

5 de noviembre de 2015
7 de noviembre de 2015
10 de noviembre de 2015
Singapur  Singapur
12 de noviembre de 2015
Reino Unido  Reino Unido
13 de noviembre de 2015
20 de noviembre de 2015
Japón  Japón
25 de noviembre de 2015
Canadá  Canadá
Datos técnicos
Dimensiones 154,4 x 76,0 x 7,8 mm
Peso 180 grs
Procesador Octa-core (2.0 GHz Quad-core Cortex-A57 &
1.5 GHz Quad-core Cortex-A53) 64-bit 20 nm
Memoria 32 GB
GPU Adreno 430
Conectividad
Ver lista
Bluetooth 4.1, Wi-Fi, -DLNA, GPS/GLONASS/BeiDou, USB 2.0 (Micro-B port, USB charging, Quick Charge 2.0), 4G, Allshare, MHL 3.0, USB OTG (Solo FAT32, exFAT), NFC, puerto de auriculares, sensor de huellas digitales
Memoria externa Hasta 256 GB microSDXC
Cámara
  • Trasera:
    • 23 MP con Flash LED
    • Autofoco híbrido a 0,03 segundos
    • Resolución 4K
    • Grabación de video:
      • 4K @ 30fps
      • 1080p @ 30fps
      • 720p @ 120 fps
  • Delantera:
    • 5,1 MP
    • Resolución 1080p
    • Grabación de video:
      • 1080p @ 30fps
      • 720p @ 60fps
Batería 3430 mAh Li-ion no removible
Bandas

Modelo E6833 y E6833 Dual

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GSM/GPRS/EDGE – 850, 900, 1800, 1900 MHz

UMTS HSPA+ - 850 (Banda V), 900 (Banda VIII), 1900 (Banda II), AWS-1 (Banda IV), 2100 (Banda I) MHz

4G LTE – Bandas 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 12, 17, 20, 38, 39, 40, 41

Modelo E6853

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GSM/GPRS/EDGE – 850, 900, 1800, 1900 MHz

UMTS HSPA+ - 850 (Banda V), 900 (Banda VIII), 1900 (Banda II), 2100 (Banda I) MHz

4G LTE – Bandas 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 12, 17, 20, 28, 38, 40
Factor de forma Pizarra o Slate
Software
Sistema operativo

Última versión

Android 5.1.1 Lollipop (lanzamiento)
Android 6.0 Marshmallow
Android 6.0.1 Marshmallow
Android 7.0 Nougat
Android 7.1.1 Nougat (actual)
Interfaz Multitáctil
Teclas físicas
Pantalla táctil capacitiva
Sensor de proximidad
Cronología
Sony Xperia Z5
Sony Xperia Z5 Premium
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
Datos adicionales

Disponibilidad de colores
     
(la disponibilidad del color depende del país y de las operadoras)

Funciones adicionales
Ver lista
IP65 / IP68 (A prueba d epolvo y agua, Sony Exmor R para móviles, Prcesador de imágenes Sony BIONZ, Sony Smile Shutter, SensMe, TrackID (no disponible desde el 15 de setiembre de 2017), Sony Enterainment Network, Remote Play, PlayStation App, Xperia Lounge VIP.

El Sony Xperia Z5 Premium es un teléfono inteligente diseñado y fabricado por Sony, presentado el 2 de setiembre de 2015 en IFA 2015, en conjunto con el Xperia Z5 y Xperia Z5 Compact, y puesto a la venta por primera vez el 5 de noviembre de 2015 en Taiwán.[2]​ Trabaja con el sistema operativo Android de Google. Es el primer y único teléfono inteligente (hasta marzo de 2018) con pantalla de resolución 4K, con la capacidad de tomar fotografías y grabar en dicha resolución. A su vez, posee un lector de huellas digitales y una cámara de 23 megapíxeles con autofoco híbrido de 0,03 segundos.

Especificaciones

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Dimensiones y colores

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Las dimensiones del dispositivo son de 154,4 x 76,0 x 7,8 mm y se encuentra disponible en los colores negro, dorado y cromo. En este último color, la parte trasera del teléfono funciona como espejo.

Redes y conectividad

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Soporta las redes GSM, GPRS, UMTS HSPA (3G),

LTE(4G Cat 6). Posee la tecnología aGPS, Bluetooth 4.2, DLNA, WiFi, MHL, NFC y es compatible con ANT+. 

Pantalla y cámaras

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Como fue descrito, posee una pantalla de ultra alta definición (3840 x 2160), de 806 ppi y 5,5″. Tiene dos cámaras fotográficas: la trasera y principal de 23 MP con enfoque automático, flash y zoom digital de hasta 8x; mientras que la delantera es de 5 MP. Ambas cámaras pueden grabar videos, siendo, en la primera, de resolución máxima 4K y en la secundaria, full HD.

Entretenimiento

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En cuanto al entretenimiento, y dado que la empresa fabricante es la misma que la de PlayStation, permite el servicio exclusivo de reproducción remota de PS4, lo que habilita al usuario a conectar su celular a la susodicha consola y jugar videojuegos en forma remota desde el teléfono.

Seguridad y varios

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Tiene incorporado lateralmente un lector de huellas dactilares y soporta reconocimiento facial y de voz para su desbloqueo, así como también posee linterna, radio FM y un sistema de audio de alta resolución.

Referencias

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  1. «Sony Xperia Z5 Premium» (en english). 2 September 2015. 
  2. «Especificaciones del producto». Sonymobile.com. Consultado el 16 de marzo de 2018. 

Veáse también

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[[Categoría:Productos de Sony]] [[Categoría:Teléfonos móviles Sony]] [[Categoría:Teléfonos inteligentes]]

Trigésimo sexta Enmienda a la Constitución de Irlanda

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{{Actualidad}}

                           
36º Enmienda a la Consitución
Fecha 25 de mayo de 2018
Tipo Enmienda

Demografía electoral
Hab. registrados 3,348,061
Votantes 2,159,655
Participación
  
64.13 %
Votos válidos 2,153,613
Votos nulos 6,042
  
66.40 %
No
  
33.60 %

La Trigésimo sexta (36º) Enmienda a la Consitución de Irlanda fue una enmienda realizada el 25 de mayo de 2018 en la República de Irlanda para permitir al parlamento irlandés legislar sobre la legalidad del aborto en ese país. Previo a la elección, debido a la octava Enmienda, se encontraba prohibido constitucionalmente el aborto en Irlanda, a excepción de riesgo de vida para la madre. Por esta razón, la propuesta es muchas veces descripta como un rechazo a la octava Enmienda. Se reemplazaría el artículo 40.3.3º de la Consitución, que fue añadido en 1983 y enmendado en 1992. Fue aprobada con un 66,40% de votos a favor, frente a un 33,60% de votos en contra.[1]

La Enmienda fue introducida en el parlamento el 9 de marzo de 2018 por el poder ejecutivo, y completó su pasaje por ambas cámaras el 27 de marzo, disponiendo la ejecución del referéndum el 25 de mayo de ese año.[2]

Background

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The British Offences Against the Person Act 1861, which made "unlawful procurement of a miscarriage" a crime, remained in force after Irish independence in 1922. The 1983 Eighth Amendment of the Constitution, which declares "the right to life of the unborn ... equal [to the] right to life of the mother", was instigated by the Pro-Life Amendment Campaign for fear that the 1861 prohibition might be weakened by liberal legislators or activist judges.[3]​ The 1992 "X case" (Attorney General v. X) ruled that abortion is permitted where pregnancy threatens a woman's life, including by risk of suicide. No regulatory framework within the limited scope of the X case judgment was passed until the Protection of Life During Pregnancy Act 2013, impelled by the 2010 A, B and C v Ireland case in the European Court of Human Rights and the 2012 death of Savita Halappanavar after miscarriage.[4]​ The 2013 act repealed the 1861 act and makes "destruction of unborn human life" a crime. In the three years 2014–2016 a total of 77 legal abortions were performed under the 2013 act.[5]​ Illegal surgical abortions in Ireland have been practically unknown since the UK's Abortion Act 1967 allowed Irish women to travel to Great Britain for a legal abortion. The 13th and 14th amendments to the constitution, passed in 1992 after the X case, guarantee the right to information about foreign abortions and to travel abroad for an abortion. The number of women at UK abortion clinics giving Irish addresses peaked at 6,673 in 2001 and was 3,265 in 2016.[6]​ The decline is partly due to unregulated use of abortion pills illegally delivered from online pharmacies.[7]

While left-wing parties and feminists opposed the 1983 amendment and have advocated its repeal, this was not supported by the two largest parties for most of the interim, Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael. In the 2010s while both parties' leadership opposed broad liberalisation, some accepted the argument for abortion in cases like fatal foetal abnormalities and pregnancy resulting from rape or incest, which are not permitted by the 1983 amendment. These became the focus of campaigning after the 2013 act. The Abortion Rights Campaign, a pro-choice alliance formed in 2012, holds an annual "March for Choice" in Dublin.[8]​ Pro-life groups have countered with a "Rally for Life".[9]​ In the run up to the 2016 general election, a number of parties committed to a referendum to repeal the Eighth Amendment (Labour,[10]Green Party,[11]Social Democrats,[12]Sinn Féin,[13]​ and Workers' Party[14]​) and a group of feminist law academics published model legislation to show what a post-Eighth Amendment abortion law could look like.[15]

A Fine Gael-led government under Taoiseach Enda Kenny took office after the 2016 election with a programme which promised a randomly selected Citizens' Assembly to report on possible changes to the Eighth Amendment, which would be considered by an Oireachtas committee, to whose report the government would respond officially in debates in both houses of the Oireachtas. Leo Varadkar replaced Enda Kenny as Taoiseach on 14 June 2017 and promised to hold a referendum on abortion in 2018.[16]​ The Citizens' Assembly, chaired by Supreme Court judge Mary Laffoy,[17]​ discussed the issue from November 2016 to April 2017 with invited experts and stakeholders, and voted to recommend repealing the existing text and replacing it with an explicit mandate for the Oireachtas to legislate on abortion.[18]​ It also made recommendations for the consequent legislation, which were more liberal than media commentators had expected.[19]​ The assembly's report was considered from September to December 2017 by a special Oireachtas committee of 21 members, which also discussed the issue with invited experts; its recommendations by majority vote were broadly similar to those of the assembly.[20]​ However, it said that because of difficulties legislating for rape and incest, abortion should be legal up to 12 weeks' gestation without restriction; on the other hand, it did not favour socio-economic grounds for abortion after 12 weeks.[21]​ In January 2018, Minister for Health Simon Harris opened the Dáil debate on the committee's report by listing the numbers from each county who travelled to Great Britain for an abortion in 2016.[22]Fianna Fáil leader Micheál Martin declared that he had changed his view on the issue and gave his support for Repeal of the Eighth Amendment and for the Committee's recommendations.[23]

Further action was called into question by a July 2016 High Court ruling that a foetus was a child within the meaning of Article 42A of the Constitution, which guarantees children's rights. The Supreme Court agreed to expedite the government's appeal of the decision, and on 7 March 2018 overturned the High Court judgment, ruling that a foetus was not a child and had no rights other than the right to life mentioned in Article 40.3.3.[24]

Proposed subsequent legislation

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The Department of Health published a policy paper on "Regulation of Termination of Pregnancy" on 9 March 2018.[25]​ This provides an outline of the policies for legislation which would repeal and replace the Protection of Life During Pregnancy Act 2013 if the Amendment of Constitution Bill is passed in a referendum. Under this scheme, abortion would be permissible in circumstances where:

  • there is a risk to the health of a woman, on assessment by two doctors, without a distinction between physical and mental health;
  • there is a medical emergency, on assessment by one doctor;
  • there is a foetal condition which is likely to lead to death before or shortly after birth, on the assessment of two doctors;
  • up to 12 weeks of pregnancy without specific indication, with a time period after an initial assessment by a medical practitioner and the termination procedure.

The Policy Paper also proposes that:

  • medical practitioners would have a right of conscientious objection;
  • the termination of pregnancy in circumstances other than those under the proposal would be a criminal offence, but that a woman who procures or seeks to procure a termination of pregnancy for herself would not be guilty of an offence.

On 26 March 2018, Tánaiste Simon Coveney announced he would support legislation on the lines of the policy paper, but suggested that this should be entrenched by requiring a two-thirds supermajority in the Dáil for any later amendment.[26]​ This was aimed at voters prepared to accept the policy-paper regulations but wary of subsequent liberalisation.[26]​ Coveney's proposal was dismissed as unconstitutional.[26][27]​ On 27 March 2018, the cabinet agreed the general scheme of the proposed "Regulation of Termination of Pregnancy Bill 2018", which health minister Simon Harris summarised that evening in the Seanad.[28][29][30]​ The scheme was published online the following day.[30]

Even if the referendum is carried, "Abortion will remain illegal in almost all circumstances until the Oireachtas passes legislation providing otherwise", which the Government would hope to introduce into the Dail in the autumn, and to have passed by the end of 2018, according to Health Minister Simon Harris, speaking a few days before the referendum.[31]

Oireachtas debate

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The Thirty-sixth Amendment of the Constitution Bill was introduced by Minister for Health Simon Harris. The debate on the Second Stage began on 9 March 2018.[32]​ The Bill passed all stages in the Dáil on 21 March.[33][34]​ The main vote on the bill was at second stage, with 110 in favour and 32 against.[35]​ Of the 16 who did not vote at second stage, five voted in favour in subsequent votes. At committee stage, there were votes on Section 2 of the bill (98–18) and the short title (96–20);[36]​ there was also a vote on the final stage (97–25).[37]Fianna Fáil TDs had a free vote although Micheál Martin was reported to be upset at how many voted against the bill.[38]Fine Gael also gave a free vote, including for ministers.[39]

TDs voting on the Thirty-sixth Amendment of the Constitution Bill 2018[35][36][37][40]
Party / group For Against Absent Notes
Fine Gael 42[v 1] 2 6 Seán Barrett and Peter Fitzpatrick voted against.[35]
Fianna Fáil 22[v 2] 21 1 Billy Kelleher did not vote
Sinn Féin 21[v 3] 1 1 Carol Nolan voted against and lost the party whip for three months.[41]Peadar Tóibín did not vote; Gerry Adams voted in Tóibín's seat by mistake on second stage.[35]
Labour Party 7 0 0
Solidarity–People Before Profit 6 0 0
Independents 4 Change Group[v 4] 7 0 0
Social DemocratsGreen Party[v 5] 5 0 0
Rural Independents Group[v 6] 1 6 0 Michael Harty voted in favour.
Unaligned independents 4 2 2
Total 115 32 10[v 7]

In the Seanad, the second stage was held on 27 March, with a 35–10 vote in favour.[28]​ Remaining stages were the following day, with the bill passed 39–8 at committee stage and 40–10 at final stage.[42][43]​ Eight of the thirteen Fianna Fáil senators voted against, as did two of nineteen from Fine Gael, and independent Rónán Mullen.[v 8]

Notes
  1. Forty-one on second stage, plus Simon Coveney on final stage
  2. Twenty on second stage, plus Seán Fleming and Charlie McConalogue on later stages
  3. Nineteen on second stage, plus Dessie Ellis and Kathleen Funchion on later stages
  4. A technical group of the four Independents 4 Change party members plus three independents
  5. A technical group of two parties
  6. A technical group of independents
  7. Excluding Seán Ó Fearghaíl, who as Ceann Comhairle votes only in the case of a tie.
  8. Jennifer Murnane O'Connor (FF) voted no on second stage; Paul Coghlan (FG) voted no on final stage; nine other senators voted no both times.[28][42]

Campaign

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Referendum campaign posters in Dublin

On 9 March 2018, Minister for Housing, Planning and Local Government Eoghan Murphy established the statutory Referendum Commission to oversee the referendum campaign, with High Court judge Isobel Kennedy as Chair.[44]

Both Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil had allowed their TDs a free vote on the issue in the Dáil.[45]​ However, although Fine Gael "cannot adopt an official party position because members have been afforded a freedom of conscience vote on issues to do with the referendum",[46]​ on 21 April Taoiseach and Fine Gael leader Leo Varadkar launched a Fine Gael 'Vote Yes' campaign for Yes-supporting party members, along with party colleagues, including Minister for Health Simon Harris and Fine Gael referendum coordinator, Josepha Madigan.[46][47][48]

On 8 May 2018, due to controversy over the origin, number, content and targetting of adverts on social media,[49]Facebook announced that it would block advertisements placed by foreign entities, most of whom are in the United States, and limit them to adverts placed by Irish organisations.[50][51]​ On 9 May, Google announced that it was blocking all adverts on the referendum from its advertising platform and YouTube, citing concerns around the integrity of elections.[52]

On 9 May, the fundraising web pages of Together for Yes, Amnesty Ireland and Termination for Medical Reasons were subjected to a denial-of-service attack.[53]

On 20 May, the parents of Savita Halappanavar called for a Yes vote, her father saying "I hope the people of Ireland will vote yes for abortion, for the ladies of Ireland and the people of Ireland. My daughter, she lost her life because of this abortion law, because of the diagnosis, and she could not have an abortion. She died."[54]​ After the landslide Yes vote, Halappanavar's father thanked the people of Ireland.[55]

Endorsing a Yes vote

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Political parties
Other organisations

Endorsing a No vote

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Political parties
Other organisations

Neutral and other positions

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  • The Church of Ireland issued statements favouring giving the Oireachtas responsibility for abortion legislation, but opposing unrestricted abortion up to 12 weeks' gestation; it concluded, "We therefore ask Church members to think through the issues involved carefully and with prayer".[76]
  • Down Syndrome Ireland issued a statement that "it is up to each individual to make their own decision about which way to vote" and condemning the use of a baby with Down Syndrome in a poster by "Save the 8th".[77]
  • Fianna Fáil is not taking a formal position on the referendum.[45]​ However, 31 of the party's TDs and Senators posed for a photograph, showing their opposition to repealing the eighth. This means over half of the parliamentary party are supporting a No vote.[78]​ Nonetheless the party's leader Micheál Martin supports 'Yes',[79]​ and, along with Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald, was one of the two speakers for the 'Yes' side in the final televised debate before the vote.[80]
  • Fine Gael "cannot adopt an official party position because members have been afforded a freedom of conscience vote on issues to do with the referendum".[46][45]​ However, Josepha Madigan, the Minister for Culture, Heritage and the Gaeltacht, is co-ordinating a campaign for Yes-supporting party members, which was formally launched on 21 April 2018 by Leo Varadkar and Simon Harris.[47][48][46]​ The campaign is supporting Together for Yes, rather than putting up posters of its own.[81]
  • The Gaelic Athletic Association reiterated its policy of neutrality on political issues, in response to media reports of various players and managers publicly taking sides.[82]
  • The head imam of the Al-Mustafa Islamic Centre supported repeal of the eighth amendment and state funded abortions in "extraordinary circumstances" but rejected "calls for abortions to be freely available until the end of the first trimester".[83]

Television debates during the referendum campaign

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Television debates during the referendum campaign
Date Programme Channel Moderator Yes advocates No advocates Notes Refs
27 April The Late Late Show RTÉ One Ryan Tubridy Peter Boylan (obstetrician); Mary Favier (GP, Together for Yes) Wendy Grace (journalist); Caroline Simons (lawyer, Love Both) The debate was the last segment of the chat show. Members of the audience also spoke. [84]
14 May Claire Byrne Live RTÉ One Claire Byrne Orla O'Connor (National Women's Council of Ireland), Peter Boylan (obstetrician), Mary Lou McDonald (Sinn Féin leader) Maria Steen (lawyer, Save the Eighth); John Monaghan (obstetrician); Mary Butler (Fianna Fáil TD) There was criticism of boisterous reactions from audience members during the debate. [85]
22 May Prime Time RTÉ One Miriam O'Callaghan Simon Harris (Fine Gael minister); [ Mary Higgins (obstetrician) withdrawn] Peadar Tóibín (Sinn Féin TD); [ Cora Sherlock (Love Both) withdrew] Sherlock withdrew the morning of the broadcast; Love Both claimed it wanted a pro-life physician instead, to counter Higgins. Maria Steen was not allowed to replace Sherlock as she had already spoken on Claire Byrne Live. Higgins was withdrawn to equalise the number of speakers on both sides. Sinn Féin clarified that Tóibín's views differ from his party's. Audience members contributed to the debate. [86][80]
23 May Pat Kenny Tonight TV3 Pat Kenny Regina Doherty (Fine Gael minister); Colm O'Gorman (Amnesty International Ireland) Rónán Mullen (independent senator); Maria Steen (Iona Institute; Save The 8th) [80]
23 May The Tonight Show TV3 Matt Cooper and Ivan Yates Mícheál Martin (Fianna Fáil leader);
Mary Lou McDonald (Sinn Féin leader)
Declan Ganley (businessman); Theresa Lowe (lawyer, former broadcaster) [80]

Opinion polling

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When respondents were asked if they would support the amendment, opinion polls showed the following results:

Date(s)
conducted
Polling organisation/client Sample size Yes No Undecided Lead
25 May 2018 Behaviour & Attitudes/RTÉ 3,800 69.4% 30.6% N/A[note 1] 38.8%
25 May 2018 (Ipsos/MRBI) The Irish Times Exit Poll >4,500 68% 32% N/A[note 1] 36%
10–16 May 2018 Red C/Sunday Business Post 1,015 56% 27% 17% 29%
14–15 May 2018 Ipsos MRBI/Irish Times 1,200 44% 32% 17% 12%
3–15 May 2018 Behaviour & Attitudes/The Sunday Times 935 52% 24% 19% 28%
18–30 Apr 2018 Millward Brown/Sunday Independent 1,003 45% 34% 18%[note 2] 11%
19–25 Apr 2018 Red C/Sunday Business Post[87] 1,000 53% 26% 19% 27%
5–17 Apr 2018 Behaviour & Attitudes/The Sunday Times 928 47% 29% 21% 18%
16–17 Apr 2018 Ipsos MRBI/Irish Times[note 3] 1,200 47% 28% 20% 19%
15–22 Mar 2018 Red C/Sunday Business Post 1,000 56% 26% 18% 30%
6–13 Mar 2018 Behaviour & Attitudes/The Sunday Times 900 49% 27% 20% 22%
1–13 Feb 2018 Behaviour & Attitudes/The Sunday Times 926 49% 30% 21% 19%
18–25 Jan 2018 Red C/Sunday Business Post[89] 1,003 60% 20% 20% 40%
25 Jan 2018 Ipsos MRBI/Irish Times 56% 29% 15% 27%
4–5 Dec 2017 Ipsos MRBI/Irish Times 1,200 62% 26% 13% 36%

During the course of the referendum campaign some surveys asked if respondents supported the proposed legislation allowing termination for any reason for the first 12 weeks of pregnancy. The following results were recorded:

Date(s)
conducted
Polling organisation/client Sample size Yes No Undecided Lead
10–16 May 2018 Red C/Sunday Business Post 1,015 52% 34% 13%[note 4] 18%
3–15 May 2018 Behaviour & Attitudes/The Sunday Times 935 44% 34% 22% 10%
18–30 Apr 2018 Millward Brown/Sunday Independent 1,003 53%[note 5] 32% 15% 21%
19–25 Apr 2018 Red C/Sunday Business Post 1,000 47% 32% 21% 15%
4–18 Apr 2018 Ireland Thinks/Irish Daily Mail 1,026 46% 31% 16% 15%
5–17 Apr 2018 Behaviour & Attitudes/The Sunday Times 928 43% 36% 21% 7%
6–13 Mar 2018 Behaviour & Attitudes/The Sunday Times May 2018 900 43% 35% 22% 8%
1–13 Feb 2018 Behaviour & Attitudes/The Sunday Times 926 43% 35% 22% 8%
14–22 Dec 2017 Ireland Thinks/Irish Daily Mail 1,144 53% 27% 20% 26%

Results

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Polls opened at 07:00 IST (UTC+1) and closed at 22:00 IST on 25 May 2018. Twelve offshore islands voted the day before, to allow for possible delays delivering ballot boxes to the count centres.[90]​ Counting began at 09:00 on 26 May. All Irish citizens entered on the electoral register were eligible to vote. A total of 3,229,672 people were on the annual electoral register (as of 15 February 2018) and an additional 118,389 electors were added to the supplementary register by the closing date of 8 May 2018,[91][92][93]​ an unusually high number of late registrations.[94]Dáil constituencies were used to organise the voting, with the returning officer for each appointed by the city or county council, and results sent to the national returning officer in Dublin. An exit poll conducted by The Irish Times predicted a 68% Yes result,[95]​ while one conducted by RTÉ predicted a similar Yes result of 69.4%.[96]​ The day after the vote, the pro-life Save the 8th campaign officially conceded defeat.[97]

Results by constituency[98]
Constituency Electorate Turnout Votes Proportion of votes
Yes No Yes No
Carlow–Kilkenny 112,704 61.99% 44,211 25,418 63.50% 36.50%
Cavan–Monaghan 91,602 63.39% 32,115 25,789 55.46% 44.54%
Clare 83,225 64.37% 34,328 19,079 64.28% 35.72%
Cork East 85,643 63.80% 34,941 19,550 64.12% 35.88%
Cork North-Central 84,412 62.45% 33,639 18,908 64.02% 35.98%
Cork North-West 68,830 65.93% 45,248 27,194 60.10% 39.90%
Cork South-Central 87,524 66.73% 40,071 18,138 68.84% 31.16%
Cork South-West 60,356 67.35% 26,147 14,387 64.51% 35.49%
Donegal 118,901 57.06% 32,559 35,091 48.13% 51.87%
Dublin Bay North 108,209 71.60% 57,754 19,573 74.69% 25.31%
Dublin Bay South 78,892 54.94% 33,919 9,928 78.49% 21.51%
Dublin Central 48,002 51.52% 18,863 5,790 76.51% 23.49%
Dublin Fingal 95,926 70.39% 51,840 15,523 76.96% 23.04%
Dublin Mid-West 71,558 67.30% 35,192 12,838 73.27% 26.73%
Dublin North-West 62,270 62.76% 28,477 10,489 73.08% 26.92%
Dublin Rathdown 64,887 70.11% 34,529 10,845 76.10% 23.90%
Dublin South-Central 76,914 59.60% 34,201 11,530 74.79% 25.21%
Dublin South-West 106,588 68.58% 54,642 18,301 74.91% 25.09%
Dublin West 67,138 67.77% 33,595 11,794 74.02% 25.98%
Dún Laoghaire 95,372 68.52% 50,243 14,953 77.06% 22.94%
Galway East 69,631 63.47% 26,525 17,546 60.19% 39.81%
Galway West 107,726 59.90% 42,422 21,906 65.95% 34.05%
Kerry 111,108 62.41% 40,285 28,851 58.27% 41.73%
Kildare North 85,587 63.76% 40,058 14,399 73.56% 26.44%
Kildare South 63,190 61.34% 27,307 11,339 70.66% 29.34%
Laois 63,860 62.01% 24,232 15,264 61.35% 38.65%
Limerick City 77,836 62.01% 32,169 15,941 66.87% 33.13%
Limerick County 67,592 62.45% 24,448 17,644 58.08% 41.92%
Longford-Westmeath 89,665 59.30% 30,876 22,113 58.27% 41.73%
Louth 106,184 65.89% 46,429 23,333 66.55% 33.45%
Mayo 91,377 62.09% 32,287 24,287 57.07% 42.93%
Meath East 67,755 65.61% 30,686 13,652 69.21% 30.79%
Meath West 65,651 62.94% 26,343 14,850 63.95% 36.05%
Offaly 66,120 64.71% 24,781 17,908 58.05% 41.95%
Roscommon-Galway 63,158 65.70% 23,677 17,709 57.21% 42.79%
Sligo-Leitrim 95,954 61.08% 34,685 23,730 59.38% 40.62%
Tipperary 113,546 63.84% 42,731 29,516 59.15% 40.85%
Waterford 83,107 64.30% 37,016 16,296 69.43% 30.57%
Wexford 110,494 66.27% 49,934 23,069 68.40% 31.60%
Wicklow 99,062 74.48% 54,629 18,931 74.26% 25.74%
Total 3,367,556 64.13% 1,429,981 723,632 66.40% 33.60%

Footnotes

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  1. a b There are no figures for undecided, as this is an exit poll.
  2. 18% were undecided and 4% refused to answer.
  3. 62% agreed with the statement that the law needs to change to recognise a woman’s right to choose.
    56% agreed that the 12 weeks proposal, while they had “reservations” about it, was a “reasonable compromise” and would be an “improvement on the current situation.”
    41% agreed with the statement: “I agree the law needs to be changed but the proposal for abortion on request up to 12 weeks goes too far.”
    40% said that abortion “is wrong and should not be made more widely available”[88]
  4. 13% were undecided and 1% refused to answer.
  5. 53% consists of 42% 'About right' + 11% 'Not far enough', as against 32% 'Too far', with 15% 'Don't know'

References

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    Repeal Yes 53% (-3) No 26% (=) D/K 21% (+2)
    12 weeks Yes 47% (-5) No 32% (-1) D/K 21% (+6)».
     
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