1986 Central African constitutional referendum explained

Country:Central African Republic
Yes:696,055
No:58,752
Invalid:8,644
Electorate:871,395

A constitutional referendum was held in the Central African Republic on 21 November 1986, following a military coup in 1981. The new constitution would make the country a one-party state with the Central African Democratic Rally as the sole legal party. The presidential term was to be set at six years, with no term limits. Under its provisions, André Kolingba, who had led the military regime since 1981, was automatically elected as president.[1] It was approved by 92.22% of voters with an 87.6% turnout.

Following the referendum, parliamentary elections took place in July 1987.

Results

ChoiceVotes%
For696,05592.22
Against58,7527.78
Invalid/blank votes8,644
Total763,451100
Registered voters/turnout871,39587.61
align=left colspan=3Source: African Elections Database

Notes and References

  1. http://africanelections.tripod.com/cf.html Elections in the Central African Republic