2011 Latvian parliamentary dissolution referendum

A referendum on whether the Saeima should be dissolved early was held in Latvia on 23 July 2011.[1] President Valdis Zatlers used his parliamentary dissolution power for the first time in the history of Latvia.[2] A "yes/no" vote was held and the referendum passed with 94.3% support.

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

President Valdis Zatlers called the referendum under the power given to him by the constitution on 28 May 2011.[2] Zatlers called the referendum in response to the Saeima's refusal to sanction a search at the home of MP Ainārs Šlesers, leader of Latvia's First Party/Latvian Way and a former cabinet minister.[3] According to the current legal procedure, the referendum on the Saeima's dissolution had to take place no later than two months after the President's decree.[4]

The Constitution of Latvia foresaw that if the people had not supported Zatlers' decision, he would have had to resign from the presidency. This could have created a judicial conundrum, however, since Zatlers' current term expired on 7 July and the Saeima held a presidential election (in which Zatlers was also a candidate) on 2 June.[5] As Zatlers was not reelected, however, this conundrum was avoided.

Opinion polls

Polls indicated that the referendum would pass by a strong margin.

Results

Choice Votes %
Yes 650,518 94.30
No 37,829 5.48
Invalid or blank votes 1,476 0.21
Total votes 689,823 100.00
Registered voters and turnout 1,542,593 44.73
Source: CVK
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gollark: Implicitly.
gollark: Wait, you basically just defined "sufficiently advanced" as "self-aware" here.
gollark: But consciousness doesn't necessarily depend on that anyway.
gollark: But if there was a version which could, it would probably need to model its own computing hardware, so actually maybe yes.

References


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