1976 Cuban constitutional referendum

A constitutional referendum was held in Cuba on 15 February 1976, the first nationwide elections on the island since the Cuban Revolution.[1] The new constitution was reportedly discussed at grass-roots level by 6,216,000 citizens, resulting in 60 of the 141 articles being modified.[1] It was approved by 99.02% of voters with a turnout of 98%.[2]

This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
Cuba
 Cuba portal
Granma front page of 14 February 1976, asking for the affirmative vote in the referendum.

Results

Choice Votes %
For5,473,53499.02
Against54,0700.98
Invalid/blank votes75,369
Total5,602,973100
Registered voters/turnout5,717,26698.00
Source: Direct Democracy
gollark: Surely you could just trilaterate the EVIL GPS host.
gollark: You *can* spoof actual GPS signals fairly easily, but nearby people might complain and phones use other ways to get location anyway.
gollark: Then emulate better.
gollark: having actual cartful of phones < many, many emulated smartphones
gollark: null.kst would not ruin the database because lemmmy is not insane.

References

  1. Nohlen, D (2005) Elections in the Americas: A data handbook, Volume I, p197 ISBN 978-0-19-928357-6
  2. Cuba, 15 February 1976: Constitution Direct Democracy (in German)
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