1994 Central African constitutional referendum

A constitutional referendum was held in the Central African Republic on 28 December 1994. The new constitution would make the country a presidential republic with a unicameral National Assembly and a Prime Minister accountable to both the President and the National Assembly.[1] It was approved by 82.7% of voters with a 45% turnout.

This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
the Central African Republic
 Central African Republic portal

Results

Choice Votes %
For460,40782.7
Against96,33717.3
Invalid/blank votes4,340
Total561,084100
Registered voters/turnout1,247,29044.98
Source: African Elections Database
gollark: I desire an invite link. Please provide one, for purposeful purposes.
gollark: Maybe I should join "discord.py".
gollark: Maybe I should finetune GPT-Neo on macron lore. How much is there?
gollark: Maybe I should rewrite Minoteaur again.
gollark: You had MULTIPLE chances to make Macron. We had to take matters into our own hands.

References

  1. Elections in the Central African Republic African Elections Database
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.