1985 Haitian constitutional referendum|
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Choice | Votes | % | Yes | 2,375,011 | 99.98% | No | 448 | 0.02% | | Valid votes | 2,375,459 | 100.00% | | Invalid or blank votes | 0 | 0.00% | | Total votes | 2,375,459 | 100.00% | | Registered voters/turnout | 2,600,000 | 91.36% | |
A constitutional referendum was held in Haiti on 22 July 1985.[1] The amendments to the new constitution would restore multi-party politics, although only on the condition that all parties swore allegiance to President Jean-Claude Duvalier, as well as re-confirming Duvalier as President for Life and allowing him to single-handedly appoint the Prime Minister and his successor. The changes were reportedly approved by 99.98% of voters,[2] although it was widely considered a sham and led to Duvalier being overthrown the following year.
Results
| Choice | Votes | % |
| For | 2,375,011 | 99.98 |
| Against | 448 | 0.02 |
| Invalid/blank votes | | – |
| Total | 2,375,459 | 100 |
| Source: Direct Democracy |
References