1978 Spanish constitutional referendum explained

Do you approve of the Constitution Bill?
Country:Spain
Flag Year:1977
Yes:15,706,078
No:1,400,505
Total:17,873,271
Electorate:26,632,180

A constitutional referendum was held in Spain on Wednesday, 6 December 1978, to gauge support for either the ratification or repealing of the Spanish Constitution which had been approved by the Cortes Generales on 31 October 1978. The question asked was "Do you approve of the Constitution Bill?" (Spanish; Castilian: ¿Aprueba el Proyecto de Constitución?). The referendum resulted in 92% of valid votes in support of the bill on a turnout of 67%.[1] [2] [3]

Purpose

The new constitution was intended to replace the many constitutional laws of the Franco era, the Fundamental Laws of the Realm, and turn Spain into a constitutional monarchy by removing many of the King's powers. The feat of creating a democratic system without breaking the structures of power of the state was made possible by the approval of the Political Reform Act of 1977, passed by the Francoist Cortes as the last Fundamental Law. It had been drafted by the President of the Cortes Españolas, Torcuato Fernández-Miranda (including changes that would replace the Cortes Españolas with a Cortes Generales), and supported by Prime Minister Adolfo Suárez and King Juan Carlos. The law provided for the legalization of political parties and a democratic election to Constituent Cortes, a committee of which then drafted the Constitution.[4]

Conduct

Some Spanish media found up to 30% of irregularities in the census in certain provinces, with many people allegedly being unable to vote while others voted twice.[5] Adolfo Suárez's government had lowered voting age from 21 to 18 only three weeks before the referendum, which resulted in a made-up electoral register increasing by over 3 million people compared to the 1977 general election amid technical, administrative and logistical issues.[6] Interior Ministry officials acknowledged deviations of up to 5.1 per 100 in the electoral census—roughly 1.5 million people according to the National Institute of Statistics—resulting from the absence of an official electoral register and in an overreliance on data from municipal registers.[7]

Results

Results by region

RegionElectorateTurnoutYesNo
Votes%Votes%
Andalusia4,347,54269.512,775,52194.36165,8825.64
Aragon894,40373.58579,73492.9044,2877.10
Asturias864,79661.79473,34891.3444,8748.66
Balearic Islands450,11570.18282,59894.8815,2515.12
Basque Country1,552,73744.65479,20574.60163,19125.40
Canary Islands879,96362.90508,66895.4624,1744.54
Cantabria374,55971.15222,55987.0133,23212.99
Castile and León1,950,81371.371,184,36190.28127,5459.72
Castilla–La Mancha1,207,52573.82751,61487.74105,03412.26
Catalonia4,398,17367.912,701,87095.15137,8454.85
Extremadura765,23570.51481,80892.4039,6377.60
Galicia2,107,61350.20942,09793.8461,8926.16
La Rioja192,59772.46120,84791.7010,9408.30
Madrid3,047,22672.231,896,20589.49222,63810.51
Murcia630,26871.44408,72293.5927,9756.41
Navarre361,24366.63182,20781.7040,80418.30
Valencian Community2,545,48174.141,676,68092.72131,6647.28
Total17,873,27167.1115,706,07891.811,400,5058.19
Sources

Notes and References

  1. [Dieter Nohlen]
  2. Web site: Spain, 6 December 1978: Constitution . de . Direct Democracy . 1 September 2019.
  3. Web site: Referéndum sobre el Proyecto de Constitución . es . congreso.es . Congress of Deputies . 1 September 2019.
  4. http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/december/6/newsid_2534000/2534705.stm 1978: Spain set to vote for democracy
  5. News: . 7 December 1978 . Editorial Incompetencia y caos . es . El País . 18 September 2017.
  6. News: . 4 April 2017 . Tribuna El censo electoral: fundamento de la democracia (I) . es . El Confidencial . 18 September 2017.
  7. News: . 7 December 1978 . Participación de más del 70 por 100 . es . Arriba . 18 September 2017.