A constitutional referendum was held in Niue on 3 September 1974.[1] The constitution was approved by 65% of voters, and came into force on 19 October.[1]
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Do you vote for self-government for Niue in free association with New Zealand on the basis of the Constitution and the Niue Constitution Act 1974 ? | |||||||||||||||||||
Results | |||||||||||||||||||
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Background
editThe proposed constitution was drafted by Robert Quentin Quentin-Baxter, a Professor of Constitutional Law and Jurisprudence at Victoria University of Wellington, in consultation with the Niue Assembly.[2] The new constitution would make Niue an autonomous region under the sovereignty of New Zealand; islanders would gain New Zealand citizenship and be able to settle freely in New Zealand.[1] It provided for a 21-member Assembly, consisting of a Speaker and 20 elected members (14 elected from single-member constituencies based on the villages and six from a single island-wide constituency). The Assembly would elected a Premier, who would choose three other members of a four-person Executive Council.[2]
The referendum was approved by the Niue Assembly on 16 July 1974,[1] and the proposed constitution was approved in the New Zealand Parliament through the Niue Amendment Bill and the Niue Constitution Act.[2]
Results
editDo you vote for self-government for Niue in free association with New Zealand on the basis of the Constitution and the Niue Constitution Act 1974?[1]
Choice | Votes | % | |
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For | 887 | 65.41 | |
Against | 469 | 34.59 | |
Total | 1,356 | 100.00 | |
Valid votes | 1,356 | 97.98 | |
Invalid/blank votes | 28 | 2.02 | |
Total votes | 1,384 | 100.00 | |
Source: Direct Democracy |
References
edit- ^ a b c d e Niue, 3 September 1974: Constitution Direct Democracy (in German)
- ^ a b c Niue moves to self-government Pacific Islands Monthly, August 1974, p2