Upper Voltan constitutional referendum, 1977
This article is part of a series on the politics and government of Burkina Faso |
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A constitutional referendum was held in the Republic of Upper Volta on 27 November 1977. It followed a military coup in 1974, and would restore multi-party democracy. The new constitution retained the presidential system of government, and limited the number of political parties to three (the three with the highest number of votes in the forthcoming parliamentary elections would keep their status and other parties disbanded). It was approved by 98.70% of voters with a 71.6% turnout.[1]
Results
Choice | Votes | % |
---|---|---|
For | 1,927,691 | 98.70 |
Against | 25,278 | 1.30 |
Invalid/blank votes | 19,108 | – |
Total | 1,972,077 | 100 |
Registered voters/turnout | 2,759,924 | 71.45 |
Source: African Elections Database |
References
- ↑ Elections in Burkina Faso African Elections Database
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