The Tenth Amendment of the Constitution of Ireland, the founding legal document of the Republic of Ireland, permitted the state to ratify the Single European Act. It was effected by the Tenth Amendment of the Constitution Act, 1987, which was approved by referendum on 26th May 1987 and signed into law on the 22nd June of the same year.
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Addition to Article 29.4.3 (added text in bold):
The Tenth Amendment of the Constitution was the first of a number of amendments that have been made to expressly permit the state to ratify changes to the founding treaties of the European Union (others have been the Eleventh, Eighteenth and Twenty-sixth Amendments). The Tenth Amendment was adopted in response to the ruling of the Supreme Court, in the case of Crotty v. An Taoiseach of the same year, that the constitution, as it stood, did not permit the state to ratify the Single European Act. This was because the Act entailed a diminution of the power of the Government (cabinet) to conduct the nation's foreign policy, a power the constitution explicitly granted to the Government. It should be noted that, while the change shown above is that made to the English language version of the constitution, constitutionally it is the Irish text that takes precedence.
The Tenth Amendment was introduced by the Fianna Fáil government of Charles J. Haughey and was also supported by Fine Gael, the Progressive Democrats and employers' and farmers' organisations. It was opposed by most members of Labour and the Workers Party. Voting in the referendum went 755,423 (69.9%) in favour and 324,977 (30.1%) against.
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