1945 French constitutional referendum in French Sudan−Niger
A constitutional referendum was held in French Sudan and Niger on 21 October 1945 as part of the wider French constitutional referendum. The first question on the new French National Assembly serving as a constituent assembly was approved by 97% of voters, whilst the temporary constitution proposed in the second question was approved by 86% of voters. Both proposals were also approved in the overall vote. Voter turnout was 79.3%.[1]
Results
Question I
Do you agree that the assembly now elected will serve as a constituent assembly?
Choice | Votes | % |
---|---|---|
For | 2,404 | 97.0 |
Against | 74 | 3.0 |
Invalid/blank votes | 95 | – |
Total | 2,573 | 100 |
Registered voters/turnout | 3,243 | 79.3 |
Source: Sternberger et al. |
Question II
Do you agree that until the enforcement of a new Constitution, public affairs will be organised according to the proposal of the law which you find reproduced on the rear of the ballot?
Choice | Votes | % |
---|---|---|
For | 2,107 | 85.5 |
Against | 356 | 15.5 |
Invalid/blank votes | 110 | – |
Total | 2,573 | 100 |
Registered voters/turnout | 3,243 | 79.3 |
Source: Sternberger et al. |
gollark: It runs on a proof of work thing too I am pretty sure.
gollark: If it was 51% of nodes, people could just run 19471248916249812648126182618256125871875819201279857120581 nodes on one computer and explode everything.
gollark: You need 51% of *mining power* on bitcoinuous things.
gollark: Not how it works.
gollark: Lots of nodes might be *worse* because weird scaling issues could crop up.
References
- Sternberger, D, Vogel, B, Nohlen, D & Landfried, K (1969) Die Wahl der Parlamente: Band II: Afrika, Erster Halbband, p1248
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