In pre-independence Ireland, divorce was only possible via the passage of a
private act by
Parliament; it was only available in case of
adultery, and if a woman was applying, divorce was only granted if the adultery was accompanied by life-threatening cruelty. This was an expensive process, so only the very wealthy were able to get such Acts passed. Most of Ireland achieved independence in 1922 as the
Irish Free State. Per the 1926 Census, 93% of the population were
Catholics, and the Catholic Church
forbade its members from divorce. In 1925, the
Oireachtas (Irish parliament) altered its
Standing Orders to say that divorce bills would not be heard, and thus it would be impossible to get a divorce. This was strenuously opposed by Senator
W. B. Yeats, who said "If you show that this country, Southern Ireland, is going to be governed by Catholic ideas and by Catholic ideas alone, you will never get
the North. You will create an impassable barrier between South and North, and you will pass more and more Catholic laws, while the North will, gradually, assimilate its divorce and other laws to
those of England." The Constitution of Ireland adopted in 1937 included a ban on divorce. An attempt by the
Fine Gael–
Labour Party government in 1986 to amend this provision was
rejected in a referendum by 63.5% to 36.5%. The Judicial Separation and Family Law Reform Act 1989 allowed Irish courts to recognize
legal separation. The government made other legislative changes to address the issues identified in that referendum campaign, including the social welfare and pension rights of divorced spouses, which were
copper fastened, and the abolition of the status of illegitimacy to remove any distinction between the rights of the children of first and subsequent unions. Shortly before its collapse, the
1989–1992 government published a
white paper on marriage breakdown, which proposed "to have a referendum on divorce after a full debate on the complex issues involved and following the enactment of other legislative proposals in the area of family law". In 1995, the
Fine Gael–
Labour Party–
Democratic Left government of
John Bruton proposed a new amendment to allow for divorce in specified circumstances. ==Changes to the text==