The 1998 Referendum on The Agreement
Introduction
On 22 May 1998 referendums were held
in Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland on 'The Agreement'
reached during the multi-party talks at Stormont. The referenda
were envisaged as an integral part of the peace process. Following
the signing of The Agreement on Good Friday, 10 April 1998, the
next stage was the putting of the contents of of the Agreement
to the people in Ireland, North and South. The final stage of
the process will be an election on 25 June 1998 to a Northern
Ireland Assembly.
Many commentators described the referenda
as 'historic' and in many respects the 22 May 1998 was a unique
day in the history of politics in the 20th century. Not since
the general election of 1918 have the people of Ireland voted
on an All-Ireland basis.
Summary of Results in Northern Ireland
Electorate: 1,200,000
Turnout: 953,583
Turnout (percentage): 81.00%
Spoilt votes: 1,738
Total Valid Vote: 951,845
Yes Vote: 676,966; 71.12%
No Vote: 274,879; 28.88%
In Northern Ireland the electorate were
asked a simple question on whether or not they supported The Agreement.
In the Northern Ireland the turnout was 81.00 per cent. Of those
who voted 71.12 per cent voted YES, that is in favour of The Agreement,
and 28.88 per cent voted NO, that is against the Agreement.
The referendum in Northern Ireland was
carried out on a single constituency basis so it was not possible
to give a breakdown of the 'yes' and 'no' figures into the two
main communities. This did not stop the 'Yes' and 'No' camps
claiming that the majority of Unionists has supported their position.
The best estimates indicated that the over-whelming majority
of Catholics / Nationalists voted 'Yes' perhaps as many as 97
per cent. In the case of Protestants / Unionists who voted 'yes'
it is estimated that the figure was between 51 and 53 per cent.
Summary of Results in the Republic of
Ireland
Electorate:
Turnout:
Turnout (percentage): 55%
Spoilt votes:
Total Valid Vote:
Yes Vote: ; 95%
No Vote: ; 5%