October 1979 Palauan constitutional referendum
A constitutional referendum was held in Palau on 23 October 1979,[1] just three months after the constitution was first approved in July. The amendments were rejected by 69% of voters.[1]
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This article is part of a series on the politics and government of Palau |
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Results
Choice | Votes | % |
---|---|---|
For | 1,905 | 30.82 |
Against | 4,277 | 69.18 |
Invalid/blank | – | |
Total | 6,182 | 100 |
Registered voters/turnout | ||
Source: Direct Democracy |
gollark: - things are, on average, generally improving- any economic system which operates at scale, i.e. any able to maintain our modern standard of living, has to wrestle with this complexity too- none of this implies that supply and demand "is made up"
gollark: I don't think this is actually true though. Prices of technology in terms of hours of work have gone down a lot, and the power of it has gone up.
gollark: Presumably because making complex and bureaucracy-driven institutions actually work sanely is an unsolved problem.
gollark: Lack of coherent response interpreted as communism.
gollark: What are you suggesting is the actual thing occurring then?
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