1964 Dahomeyan constitutional referendum|
|
|
Choice 
 | 
Votes
 | 
%
 |  
  Yes
 | 
966,292
 | 
99.86%
 |  
   No
 | 
1,318
 | 
0.14%
 |  
| Valid votes
 | 
967,610
 | 
99.94%
 |  
| Invalid or blank votes
 | 
619
 | 
0.06%
 |  
| Total votes
 | 
968,229
 | 
100.00%
 |  
| Registered voters/turnout
 | 
1,051,614
 | 
92.07%
 |    | 
A constitutional referendum was held in the Republic of Dahomey on 5 January 1964. The main issues were changing the system of government to a presidential system, scrapping term limits for the president, and having a unicameral parliament. The referendum passed with 99.86% of voters approving the changes. Turnout was 92% of the 1,051,614 registered voters.[1]
Results
| Choice | Votes | % | 
|---|
| For | 966,292 | 99.86 | 
| Against | 1,318 | 0.14 | 
| Total | 967,610 | 100.00 | 
 | 
| Valid votes | 967,610 | 99.94 | 
|---|
| Invalid/blank votes | 619 | 0.06 | 
|---|
| Total votes | 968,229 | 100.00 | 
|---|
| Registered voters/turnout | 1,051,614 | 92.07 | 
|---|
| Source: Nohlen et al. | 
References
- ^ Dieter Nohlen, Michael Krennerich & Bernhard Thibaut (1999) Elections in Africa: A data handbook, p89 ISBN 0-19-829645-2