1970 Moroccan constitutional referendum

A constitutional referendum was held in Morocco on 24 July 1970.[1] The new constitution replaced that approved by referendum in 1962, but suspended by King Hassan II in 1965 (when Parliament was also dissolved) following riots in Casablanca. It was approved by 98.8% of voters, with a 93.2% turnout.[2] Following its approval, fresh elections were held on 21 August.[3]

This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
Morocco
Judiciary
 Morocco portal

Results

Choice Votes %
For4,424,39398.8
Against55,3421.2
Invalid/blank votes36,008
Total4,515,743100
Registered voters/turnout4,847,31093.2
Source: Nohlen et al.
gollark: osmarkshypotheticalchatprotocol™ is much better.
gollark: It also probably serves as load balancing since the computers of this time were worse.
gollark: But as long as one person did the network could work across them.
gollark: Most people did not have access to intercontinental or really long distance links IIRC.
gollark: The networks of the time just wouldn't make it practical to have everyone connect to one server somewhere like we can now.

References

  1. Historic overview of the Moroccan parliamentary experience Parliament of Morocco (in French)
  2. Nohlen, D, Krennerich, M & Thibaut, B (1999) Elections in Africa: A data handbook, p632 ISBN 0-19-829645-2
  3. Morocco Inter-Parliamentary Union
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.