1958 French Sudan constitutional referendum
A referendum on the new constitution of France was held in French Sudan on 28 September 1958 as part of a wider referendum held across the French Union. The new constitution would see the country become part of the new French Community if accepted, or result in independence if rejected. It was approved by 97.54% of voters.[1]
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Parliament
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Administrative divisions
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Results
Choice | Votes | % |
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For | 945,586 | 97.54 |
Against | 23,875 | 2.46 |
Invalid/blank votes | 2,736 | – |
Total | 972,197 | 100 |
Registered voters/turnout | 2,142,266 | 45.38 |
Source: Direct Democracy |
gollark: Blackmail you, leak it, use it as a pretext to do something else, who knows.
gollark: It does, because each person with access to your data is another one who might have some incentive to be evil.
gollark: Is it? Well, it's not a personal psychologically.
gollark: The government isn't a person. It's a vast corruptible organization with incentives which don't really align with your own.
gollark: I mean, if it was, I don't know, some totalitarian government or other, and I was protesting against them, that would be an incentive.
References
- Frankreich, 28. September 1958 : Verfassung Direct Democracy
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