1951 Uruguayan constitutional referendum
A constitutional referendum was held in Uruguay on 16 December 1951.[1] The proposed amendments to the constitution were approved by 54% of voters.
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This article is part of a series on the politics and government of Uruguay |
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Proposals
The proposed changes to the constitution were presented to the General Assembly on 31 June 1951. The Chamber of Deputies approved it by a vote of 85 to 14 on 10 October, whilst the Senate approved it by a vote of 26 to 4 on 26 October.[1]
The amendments would:[1]
- reintroduce the colegiado system of government, giving six seats on the National Council of Government to the largest party and three to the second largest party.
- provide for a bicameral General Assembly elected by proportional representation.
- retain the use of the lema system.
- allow petitions for constitutional amendments signed by 10% of registered voters, and allow the General Assembly to put forward a counter-proposal to the proposed amendments.
Results
Choice | Votes | % |
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For | 232,076 | 54.00 |
Against | 197,684 | 46.00 |
Total | 429,760 | 100 |
Registered voters/turnout | 1,158,939 | 37.08 |
Source: Direct Democracy |
Aftermath
The colegiado system was reintroduced prior to the 1954 general elections.
gollark: And my idea for how the buying/selling would work is that you'd create a "sell order" if you wanted to sell it, and set a price, and your share would be sold as soon as anyone created a "buy order" with that price or a higher one.
gollark: The auctioning could be done with a Vickrey auction, which apparently "gives bidders an incentive to bid their true value", which seems like a good property.
gollark: My suggested way for it to work has always been having meme shares pay dividends (based on upvotes, maybe every hour or after a fixed time or something), giving the creator some of the shares, and selling the others to "the market" (maybe via some sort of short auction mechanism?), then just letting everyone trade them freely until they pay out.
gollark: Investing is a losing proposition, or at least a breaking-even-usually one, sooo...
gollark: Yep!
References
- Uruguay, 16 December 1951: Constitution Direct Democracy (in German)
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