Prior to 2018, abortion was legal only where pregnancy presented "a real and substantial risk to the life" of the woman, as mandated by the 1983
Eighth Amendment of the Constitution and regulated by the
Protection of Life During Pregnancy Act 2013. After the
2016 general election, a
Citizen's Assembly was established by Oireachtas
resolution and tasked with reporting on several issues, the first being "the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution". It began discussion in November 2016 and finally voted in April 2017 on a range of questions. Its first recommendation was to replace the constitutional prohibition with a mandate for the Oireachtas to legislate on abortion. It then provided a range of recommendations for circumstances in which the Oireachtas might legislate to allow abortion. The assembly's formal report was
laid before the Oireachtas on 29 June 2017 and referred to a special Oireachtas Joint Committee for consideration. The committee met from September to December 2017 and produced its own report, recommending the same constitutional amendment as the assembly but a slightly more liberal statutory regime. The assembly had recommended allowing termination on grounds of rape or incest, but the committee felt it would be impossible to provide adequate proof for such cases and instead opted for an unrestricted provision of termination within 12 weeks' gestation. Their report was debated in the Dáil between 17 and 25 January 2018 and again on 21 February.
Simon Harris, the
Minister for Health, began by saying: :I want to recognise that the recommendations contained in the Committee’s report represent the views of the majority of members, but that there was not unanimous agreement on them. I respect the views of those who dissent from the recommendations but I do believe they are the basis on which we must proceed on this issue. A referendum on 25 May 2018 approved the
Thirty-sixth Amendment of the Constitution, which in effect repealed the
Eighth Amendment and empowered the
Oireachtas to legislate for abortion. Legal challenges delayed enactment of the amendment until 18 September 2018. ==Legislative history==