2010 Cook Islands Member of Parliament reduction referendum|
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Outcome | Proposal failed as two-thirds quorum not reached |
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Choice | Votes | % | Yes | 4,983 | 63.84% | No | 2,822 | 36.16% | Valid votes | 7,805 | 92.61% | Invalid or blank votes | 623 | 7.39% | Total votes | 8,428 | 100.00% | Registered voters/turnout | 10,500 | 80.27% | |
A referendum on reducing the number of MPs was held in the Cook Islands on 17 November 2010, alongside the general elections.[1] Although 64% of voters voted in favour,[2] the proposal failed as it required two-third of voters to vote in favour.[3]
Opinion polls
According to a poll published by the Cook Islands News on 11 September 2010, 76% of respondents supported the referendum proposal.[4] A number of politicians publicly stated their support for the referendum proposal, including Democratic Party Leader Robert Wigmore and Cook Islands Party deputy leader Teina Bishop.[5]
Results
Choice | Votes | % |
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For | 4,983 | 63.84 |
Against | 2,822 | 36.16 |
Total | 7,805 | 100.00 |
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Valid votes | 7,805 | 92.61 |
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Invalid/blank votes | 623 | 7.39 |
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Total votes | 8,428 | 100.00 |
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Registered voters/turnout | 10,500 | 80.27 |
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Source: PINA[6] |
References