- Source: 2008 Tuvaluan constitutional referendum
A constitutional referendum was held in Tuvalu on 30 April 2008. The referendum sought to abolish the monarchy of Tuvalu and establish the country as a republic. Had the referendum passed, the new president would have been indirectly elected by the Parliament of Tuvalu.
The referendum failed, with 679 votes in favour of establishing a republic and 1,260 votes to retain the monarchy. As a consequence, Tuvalu remained a monarchy, and Elizabeth II remained head of state. Turnout for the referendum was low. Only 1,939 voters cast valid ballots, out of the approximately 9,000 voting-aged Tuvaluans. In comparison, 8,501 votes were cast in the 2006 parliamentary election. A previous referendum on becoming a republic in 1986 was also rejected.
Results
See also
1999 Australian republic referendum
2009 Vincentian constitutional referendum
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Tokelau
- Hak LGBT menurut negara
- 2008 Tuvaluan constitutional referendum
- 1999 Australian republic referendum
- 2002 Gibraltar sovereignty referendum
- Monarchy of Tuvalu
- 2009 Vincentian constitutional referendum
- List of monarchy referendums
- Maatia Toafa
- Abolition of monarchy
- Modern republicanism
- Constitutional crisis