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Irish general election: Voters take to the polls

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Irish general election: Voters take to the polls

Getty Images A woman in a beige coat and grey trousers walks past a yellow sign on a fence that says 'Polling Station' in English and Irish.Getty Images

Polling stations are open until 22:00 local time on Friday

The polls have opened for the Irish general election.

Voters are able to cast their ballot up until 22:00 local time to choose representatives to serve as Teachtaí Dála (TDs) in the Dáil, the lower house of the Oireachtas (Ireland’s parliament).

The next Dáil, which will be the 34th, will have 174 TDs, up from 160 in 2020.

Friday’s vote comes after a three-week election campaign.

PA A woman sits at a blue desk in a school issuing voting cards. She has blonde hair and glasses. Two men line up at the desk. In the background there is a desk with two other men lined up to collect voting cards.PA

Voters in County Wicklow as the polls opened on Friday morning

Voters will elect 173 TDs, as one seat in the Dáil goes to the Ceann Comhairle (Speaker).

Eighty-eight TDs is the number required for an overall majority.

The new TDs will represent 43 constituencies throughout the Republic of Ireland.

More than 3.4 million people are registered to vote in the Republic of Ireland.

To vote in the election, voters must be over 18 years of age, be an Irish or British citizen, be resident in Ireland, and be listed on the Irish Electoral Register.

Election candidates include representatives from the three main parties – outgoing coalition partners Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael, and the leading opposition party in the outgoing Dáíl, Sinn Féin.

These parties are joined by many smaller parties and a significant number of independent candidates.

The counting of votes begins on Saturday morning and is expected to continue over the weekend and possibly into the following week.

The first sitting of the 34th Dáil is scheduled for Wednesday 18 December at 10:30.

A government will be officially formed when the Dáil passes a vote to install a new taoiseach (Irish prime minister).

Getty Images Pedestrians walk along a street in Dublin which is covered in election posters along the lamppostsGetty Images

The counting of votes begins on Saturday and is expected to continue over the weekend and possibly into next week

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