As part of its Eighth Amendment campaign, the Workers Party revealed two posters this morning, one which says yes and one which says no.

The yes poster is calling on the public to vote to repeal the Eighth Amendment in the upcoming referendum.

The second poster, which says no, is the Workers Party 1983 referendum poster, which called on the public not to put the Eighth Amendment into the Constitution.

Dublin City Councillor Eilis Ryan said the Workers Party was the only party to actively oppose the 1983 amendment in the Dáil.

She said the party wanted to highlight the fact it has "a consistent track record" over the past 35 years and "everything the Workers Party said in 1983 had come true", including "damaging women's lives".

She noted that the party will only be putting up its yes posters in the run up to 25 May. The No posters will be "kept as a memento" in the Workers Party Office.

Earlier, lawyers who are campaigning for a yes vote in the referendum said the only definitive legal way to provide solutions for couples who experience fatal foetal anomaly in Ireland is by removing the amendment from the Constitution.

Senior Council Peter Ward said in a woman's darkest hour "when she receives devastating news that her pregnancy will not last, we are turning our backs on her".

Barrister-at-Law Gráinne Gilmore said the amendment has proven itself to be a failed legal experiment.