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The Referendum Commission has criticised the Government's decision to issue an information booklet (pictured) which confused people about its origin.

Referendum Commission head criticises government's Fiscal Compact book

Justice Kevin Feeney says the Government’s booklet, separate to its own, caused “confusion among the public”.

THE HIGH COURT JUDGE who chaired the Referendum Commission’s information campaign for the referendum on the Fiscal Compact has criticised the Government for issuing its own information booklet alongside it.

Justice Kevin Feeney’s official report on the Commission’s activity for the May 31 referendum said there was “evidence of confusion among the public” about the production of two separate information guides, one by the government and one by the commission itself.

Even some TDs and Senators were confused by the two guides, and had wrongly assumed that the Government’s information guide – which was completed and distributed to homes before the Referendum Commission’s own guide – had actually been produced by the Commission.

“The situation was not helped by the lack of a clear statement of the status of the producers of the Government guide and the lack of any contact details on the document,” Feeney wrote.

The judge remarked that the Department of the Taoiseach’s Customer Action Plan included a commitment to put full contact details on all of its written material – something it had failed to honour in its guide.

The Commission’s report comes only days after the Supreme Court released its reasoning for ruling that the government’s website for the Children’s Rights referendum failed the test of impartiality and fairness, and was therefore an illegal use of public funds.

Feeney’s report also includes a poll commissioned by the Referendum Commission on whether people felt informed about the matters they were asked to vote on.

61 per cent of respondents said they understood the Fiscal Compact and its goals at least to some extent, though 39 per cent said they did not understand it very well or at all.

This level of awareness was broadly similar to that showed before the second Lisbon Treaty referendum in 2009.

In full: TheJournal.ie’s coverage of the Fiscal Compact referendum

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    Mute Egg Head
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    Mar 24th 2015, 9:19 PM

    “However, if you’re reporting an ex or just have some grudge over a personal issue, maybe try skipping straight to Jeremy Kyle and leave us out of your sad nonsense” he continued.

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    Mute Frank Cauldhame
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    Mar 24th 2015, 10:07 PM

    “No-one will ever know you that you have called…..”
    That bit fills me with confidence ;-)

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    Mute Michael Sands
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    Mar 24th 2015, 10:58 PM

    Use a public phone?

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    Mute Charles McDonald
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    Mar 24th 2015, 11:31 PM

    Silly question but are their still like payphones around ?? Can’t imagine they get much use

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    Mute Jack Bowden
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    Mar 25th 2015, 1:55 AM

    So we have a rat problem. Is this news? There will always be rats.

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    Mute Martin Byrne
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    Mar 25th 2015, 7:24 AM

    Should be shelter killers? Rapists? Child abusers? We are the police. This is OUR society. We should reject and convict those who commit crimes.

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    Mute Michael Sands
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    Mar 25th 2015, 11:20 PM

    It is a problem to rat out rats who are criminally insane, there are some real sickos out there…
    Not many comments on here, makes you think some feel guilty to reply to this story lol.

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    Mute Michael Sands
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    Mar 24th 2015, 10:57 PM

    “No-one will ever know you that you have called.” So keep on calling, lol.

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    Mute Michael Sands
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    Mar 24th 2015, 11:01 PM

    Or dialling?

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    Mute Michael Sands
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    Mar 24th 2015, 11:01 PM

    So 1800 25 00 25?

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