Northern Mariana Islands status referendum, 1969

This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
the Northern Mariana Islands

A referendum on the islands' status was held in the Northern Mariana Islands on 9 November 1969.[1] For the fourth time since 1958 a majority of voters supported integration with Guam. However, a referendum held in Guam on 4 November on integration with the Northern Mariana Islands had been rejected by 58% of Guamanian voters.[2]

Background

Previous referendums on either integration with Guam or the islands' status had been held in 1958, 1961 and 1963. On each occasion a majority had been in favor of integration. However, the proposal remained unfulfilled.

The 1969 referendum was organized by the local Parliament, and was held prior to a visit by a United Nations commission in early 1970.[1]

Results

Choice Votes %
Integration with Guam1,94260.82
Free association with the USA1,11634.95
Unincorporated territory of the USA1073.35
Independence190.59
Trust territory50.15
Commonwealth with the USA10.01
US state10.01
Unincorporated territory of Japan10.01
Integration with Japan10.01
Invalid/blank votes40
Total3,233100
Registered voters/turnout4,95465.26
Source: Direct Democracy

References

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