Tánaiste Joan Burton has said she will support measures to make it much harder for denominational schools to give admit children of the faith of the school ahead of other children in the event of excess demand for places in their schools.
At present about 20 percent of schools, mostly in Dublin, are over-enrolled.
According to The Irish Independent newspaper, during a speech to party colleagues, Deputy Burton said: “Parents shouldn’t feel compelled to baptise their children just to get a school place.”
A spokesperson for the Labour Party subsequently confirmed that, in addition to a commitment to increasing the number of multi-denominational schools in Ireland, the party is working on an amendment to the Equal Status Act which allows schools to admit children of their own religion first.
The spokesperson said: “We must provide parents and children with access to their local schools, regardless of their beliefs.
Currently faith schools are allowed to admit children of their own faith first on the grounds that they were established in the first place to serve their own faith community.
There may be constitutional difficulties if this right is too strictly curtailed.