2010 French Guianan status referendum

A referendum on becoming an autonomous overseas territory was held in French Guiana on 10 January 2010.[1] The proposal was rejected by 70% of voters who prefer full integration in the French central state. The turnout was 48%.[1] A simultaneous referendum was rejected in Martinique.[2]

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

Background

French President Nicolas Sarkozy proposed the referendum after visiting the Caribbean island of Martinique in June 2009.[3] The French overseas departments of Martinique and Guadeloupe had suffered prolonged general strikes in early 2009, due to lower wages and standards of living than mainland France.[3]

French Guianan voters were asked whether they wanted more power to be given to the local government based in Cayenne.[3] French Guiana was an overseas region and an overseas department of France, regulated by the article 73 of the French Constitution, giving it the same political status as metropolitan departments and regions. The proposed change would have led to it becoming an overseas collectivity, regulated by the article 74 of the French Constitution, similar to French Polynesia.[4]

Results

French Guianan status referendum, 2010
Choice Votes %
Against 22,281 70.22
For 9,448 29.78
Valid votes 31729 97.67
Invalid or blank votes 757 2.33
Total votes 32,486 100.00
Registered voters and turnout 67,460 48.16
Source: Direct Democracy
gollark: Apparently whoever wrote the specifications for what people learn in "computer science" thought it was important that people know about this, and for consistency or something they designed their own assembly language (which does not actually run on anything).
gollark: (technically a family of them, but whatever)
gollark: Assembly is basically a very low-level language which directly compiles to machine code, which is what the CPU hardware runs.
gollark: The assembly language is actually reasonable and vaguely ARM-like.
gollark: The spec, I mean. I don't think we managed to implement that because it makes no sense.

References


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