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Voting | Overview

The House decides all questions put to it by the Chair. The question on an item of business is put at the conclusion of the debate and the manner in which questions are put is for the Chair to decide, based on his or her experience and judgment.

Putting the question

No dissent

If the matter before the House is one on which there appears to be general agreement, the Chair may put the question in an informal manner – "Is the motion [or amendment] agreed?" and, if there is no dissent evident, will confirm the decision of the House by stating "Motion [amendment] agreed". This is sometimes referred to as “simple agreement”.

Similarly, in the case of opposition amendments to Government Bills or motions, the Chair may ask the Member sponsoring the amendment if he or she wishes to press it and, if the Member does not wish to do so, there is no need to put the question.

Possible dissent

If an item is not either given simple agreement or withdrawn, where a Member wishes to press the motion or amendment, the Chair will rise and state "The question is that…".

The Chair will then ask the Members to decide by saying "Tá" or "Níl". The Chair judges the result by the verbal responses and states that the question is carried or lost.

At this point, the Members may dissent from the Chair’s statement by calling "Vótáil". The House will then prepare to divide.

There are two methods of voting: electronic and manual. All votes are conducted electronically, with the exception of the election of the Ceann Comhairle, the nomination of the Taoiseach and members of the Government, and a motion of confidence in the Government, all of which are taken manually. Each Member votes from a designated seat for the purpose of electronic voting, the location of which is assigned by the Whip of each party or group.

Last updated: Fri, 29 Nov 2024

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