1991 Mauritanian constitutional referendum

A constitutional referendum was held in Mauritania on 12 July 1991. The new constitution would restore multi-party democracy for the first time since the 1960s, as well as creating a bicameral Parliament with a Senate and National Assembly. The constitution would not include term limits for the President.[1] It was approved by 97.94% of voters with an 85.3% turnout.

This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
Mauritania

Member State of the Arab League


 Mauritania portal

Results

Choice Votes %
For713,49397.94
Against14,9992.06
Invalid/blank votes3,020-
Total731,512100
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gollark: It's some sort of horrible protocol which works via XML over HTTP over UDP somehow.
gollark: I assume it's basically a dumb video output which gets software rendered pixels pushed to it.
gollark: Given the existence of HTTPS, they can't really do much on devices which aren't under their direct control. Yay progress/cryptography!
gollark: My school has ridiculously intrusive monitoring (seemingly including a keylogger) on the school-owned computer hardware, and for phones and stuff just route traffic through the mostly ineffective filtering proxy thing.

References

  1. Elections in Mauritania African Elections Database


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