Panama Canal expansion referendum, 2006

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Panama

The Panama Canal expansion referendum was held on October 22, 2006, when the citizens of Panama approved the Panama Canal expansion project by a wide margin.

Constitutional background

According to article 325 of the Panamanian Constitution, any proposal for the construction of a third set of locks or a sea-level Canal on the existing route that the Panama Canal Authority (ACP) proposes has to be approved by the executive branch and submitted to the National Assembly for its approval or rejection. It also has to be submitted to a national referendum no earlier than three months after its approval by the National Assembly.[1]

Proposal

Components of the project

The Panama Canal expansion proposal was presented on April 24, 2006 by President Martín Torrijos to the Panamanian people after years of study by the ACP. The largest project at the Canal since its original construction, the expansion will double its capacity and allow more traffic.

The project will create a new lane of traffic along the Canal through the construction of a new set of locks. Details of the project include the following integrated components:

According to the ACP, the project will have an estimated cost of US$5.25 billion, will be self-financed by tolls increase and will take up to 7 or 8 years of construction time.

Panama's Cabinet approved the project, and on July 14, the National Assembly unanimously approved the proposal to expand the Canal. In addition, the Assembly created and passed a law mandating a national referendum in which the people of Panama would vote to approve expansion. The referendum was held on October 22, 2006, the first Sunday at least 90 days after the legislation was signed.[3]

Referendum question

Referendum ballot

The referendum used a single ballot divided in half with (Yes) at the left with a green background and No at the right with a red background. Above these two options the text of the question read:

Do you approve the proposal of construction of a Third Set of Locks on the Panama Canal?[4]

Campaign

Opposition to the project was vigorous as skeptics questioned the government's cost estimates and raised fears that corruption would doom the project. But the government's campaign for the expansion, the largest modernization of the canal in its history, was even more intense. Officials portrayed a "sí" vote as a vote for the children of Panama. Without an expanded canal, officials predicted, shipping traffic would find other routes and Panama's growing economy would dry up.[5]

Polls

The dates listed are normally the date the survey was concluded, not the date it was published. Most news and political affairs sources use the convention of using the last date that the poll was conducted in order to establish the inclusion/exclusion of current events. Only polls after the proposal unveiling (April 24, 2006) are included.

Polling Firm Date Link Yes No Undecided
Dichter & NeiraOctober 8, 2006PDF79%21%
PSM Sigma DosOctober 3, 2006HTML72%21%7%
CID GallupOctober 2, 2006HTML77%10%13%
PSM Sigma DosSeptember 6, 2006HTML66%23%11%
Dichter & NeiraSeptember 3, 2006HTML63.9%24.8%11.3%
Dichter & NeiraSeptember 3, 2006HTML62.7%33.7%3.6%
Dichter & NeiraAugust 6, 2006HTML54.4%17.1%28.5%
PSM Sigma DosJuly 10, 2006HTML66%23%11%
Dichter & NeiraJune 4, 2006HTML57.9%19.8%22.3%
Dichter & NeiraMay 8, 2006HTML57.3%27.2%15.5%
  1. ^ This poll was done as a simulated referendum, using a similar ballot to the one used on the October 22 referendum, having a secret vote. People that said that they were definitely not going to vote (16%) were excluded from this simulation. This exercise had no null or blank votes.
  2. ^ In this poll the question was made out loud and the answer was registered.
  3. ^ This time the same people were asked to make a simulated vote too. People that said they were not going to vote on the referendum were excluded (7.8%).

The margin of error in these surveys is typically between 2 and 2.9%. See the links for actual error values associated with particular surveys.

Voting

The voting process went smoothly, without major events that could tamper the results. The voter turnout was low, 43.32%. Voting took place on schedule from 7am to 4pm but people still in line at that time were allowed to vote.[4] Unofficial results were made known by the Electoral Tribunal by its system of unofficial results reporting, just 30 minutes after the voting ended. This system consists of series of data-collecting centers that communicate with the Panama City Press Room of the Electoral Tribunal. This centers receive the unofficial results given by each polling station by phone, cell phone and other means, while the official results begin their journey to the different counting centers. This system has proved highly successful in previous elections and has given almost the same results as the official count. Under this system, by 6 p.m. (2 hours after the voting ended) the results of approximately 25% of polling stations were available and the likely approval of the project was known. However, the official results are the responsibility of the National Scrutiny Junta, and that took some days (3) as official declarations came from all over the country to Panama City.

Results

Choice Votes %
For705,14477.80
Against201,24722.20
Invalid/blank votes17,638
Total924,029100
Registered voters/turnout2,132,84243.32
Source: Direct Democracy

Reactions

References

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