Amelia Goonerage from Dublin joins Yes campaigners celebrating their win in Dublin Castle after the yes vote won the Irish referendum to repeal the 8th Amendment.Sam Boal/RollingNews.ie

Individuals seek to overturn the “Yes” vote following Ireland’s referendum to make its abortion laws more liberal.

Three separate court challenges have been brought to the Irish High Court seeking to overturn the May 25 referendum result which saw the Irish public vote to repeal the Eighth Amendment and work toward making Ireland’s abortion laws more liberal.

Dublin woman Joanna Jordan, Co. Louth musician and piano teacher Charles Byrne and Ciaran Tracey, a retired public servant from Leitrim village, have filed separate challenges which claim those traveling home to vote did so illegally, that no voters were deregistered and that the Irish Taoiseach (Prime Minister) and Minister for Health made misleading statements during the referendum campaign. Both Taoiseach Leo Varadkar and Minister for Health Simon Harris were campaigning for a Yes vote.

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Jordan, who campaigned in Dublin for the No side for 17 weeks before the referendum, claims that large numbers of potential no voters found that they were de-registered and not allowed to vote. She also makes claims that there was an unexplained upswing in the Yes vote, eluding to tampering with ballot boxes between the time voting closed on May 25 and when the tally began on the morning of May 26.

The Dubliner claimed that convents and nursing homes had been deregistered in this manner, while “thousands of young Irish citizens who were paid to return to vote” were not questioned on the 18-month residency rule when they came to polling stations. Irish citizens lose their right to vote after 18 months living outside of the country or when they intend to live abroad for more than 18 months.

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In the second challenge, Byrne believes that misstatements were made by Varadkar and Harris during the campaign and that the Referendum Commission’s information campaign and booklet also failed to provide the truth of the proposal being voted on.

The Referendum Commission is also challenged by Tracey who states that politicians campaigning for a yes vote played upon the sympathies of the Irish public.

The three cases have been adjourned until Monday, June 11. Jordan previously managed to delay the result of the 2012 Children's Referendum with a challenge that lasted three years. 

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