1991 Puerto Rican constitutional referendum|
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Choice | Votes | % | Yes | 559,159 | 45.85% | No | 660,264 | 54.15% | | Valid votes | 1,219,423 | 97.81% | | Invalid or blank votes | 27,240 | 2.19% | | Total votes | 1,246,663 | 100.00% | |
A constitutional referendum was held in Puerto Rico on 8 December 1991.[1] The amendments would guarantee:
- The inalienable right to freely and democratically determine Puerto Rico's political status.
- The right to choose a dignified, non-colonial, non-territorial status not subordinate to plenary powers of Congress.
- The right to vote for three alternatives.
- The right that only results with a majority will be considered triumphant in a plebiscite.
- The right that any status would protect Puerto Rico's culture, language and identity, and continued independent participation in international sports events.
- The right that any status guarantees the individual's right to American citizenship.
The changes were rejected by 54.1% of voters, with a turnout of 60.7%.[2][3]
Results
| Choice | Votes | % |
| For | 559,159 | 45.9 |
| Against | 660,264 | 54.1 |
| Invalid/blank votes | 27,240 | – |
| Total | 1,246,663 | 100 |
| Source: Nohlen |
References