Taylor served two periods as
Minister for Equality and Law Reform, in the 1993-94 Government under Taoiseach
Albert Reynolds, and the 1994-97 Government under Taoiseach
John Bruton.
1993–1994 Government In January 1993, he was appointed to the newly created position of Minister for Equality and Law Reform in the
Fianna Fáil–Labour
coalition government led by Albert Reynolds as
Taoiseach. Legislation introduced by Taylor and enacted during his initial term of office included the
Interpretation (Amendment) Act 1993 – providing for gender inclusive language in Acts of the
Oireachtas, the Jurisdiction of Courts and Enforcement of Judgments Act 1993, the Stillbirths Registration Act 1994, Maintenance Act 1994 and the Maternity Protection Act 1994 extending maternity rights.
1994–1997 Government Labour resigned from government in November 1994, and from December 1994 it was part of a new coalition government of
Fine Gael, Labour and
Democratic Left formed without a new election, dubbed the
Rainbow government, led by
John Bruton as Taoiseach. Taylor was again appointed as Minister for Equality and Law Reform. In 1995 Taylor was in charge of the government proposal to legislate to remove the prohibition of divorce from the
constitution; he steered the relevant bills through
Dáil Éireann and
Seanad Éireann. The
subsequent referendum was approved by a margin of 0.5 per cent. In the course of the campaign he survived criticism of the measure directed at his
Jewish faith, as well as a
Supreme Court ruling that public monies could not properly be spent in promoting the government's opinion on a referendum proposal.
Measures introduced by Taylor and enacted by the subsequent Dáil Taylor also introduced two wide-ranging anti-discrimination measures: the Employment Equality Bill and the Equal Status Bill. These were struck down by the Supreme Court but revised versions were approved by the Government in the final months of Taylor's term of office, and were ultimately published and enacted during the
following Dáil term. ==Family and personal life==