Ecuadorian constitutional referendum, 2008

Poster aimed at the Ecuadorian diaspora in London
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Ecuador

A constitutional referendum was held in Ecuador on 28 September 2008 to ratify or reject the constitution drafted by the Ecuadorian Constituent Assembly elected in 2007.[1] The new constitution was approved by 69% of voters.

Following its approval, early elections were held in April 2009.[2]

Background

President Rafael Correa had initially stated he would resign if the constitution were rejected, but later stated he would finish his term. A poll from May 2008 saw 41% to 31% in favour of the constitution draft.[3] Provisions include the right to healthcare, food, social security, and education as well as an emphasis on Latin American integration. The more controversial proposals include allowing a second four-year term for the president and legalising civil unions.[4]

Conduct

The EU sent an election observation team.[5]

Results

Choice Votes %
For4,722,07369.46
Against2,075,76430.54
Invalid/blank votes588,755
Total7,386,592100
Registered voters/turnout9,754,88375.81
Source: Direct Democracy

References

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