1973 Philippine constitutional plebiscite

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Yobot (talk | contribs) at 04:52, 18 July 2016 (Removed invisible unicode characters + other fixes, removed: ‎ using AWB (12054)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The Philippine constitutional plebiscite of 1973 ratified the 1973 Constitution of the Philippines.

In 1970, delegates were elected to a constitutional convention which began to meet in 1971. In September 1972, President Ferdinand Marcos declared martial law and arrested 11 members of the convention. The convention then re-convenened wrote a constitution in line with what dictator President Ferdinand Marcos wanted.

Marcos issued Presidential Decree No. 86 calling for the cancellation of the plebiscite and instituted barangays' citizens' assemblies to ratify the new constitution by a referendum from 10–15 January 1973.

On 17 January 1973, Marcos issued Proclamation No. 1102 certifying and proclaiming that the 1973 Constitution had been ratified by the Filipino people and thereby was in effect.

These results were challenged by the Ratification Cases heard by the Philippine Supreme Court in 1973. The court upheld the results and the ratification of the 1973 Constitution.

For this plebiscite to changes to voting requirements were implemented. The voting age was reduced from 18 to 15 years old and those who were illiterate were allowed to vote.

Results

Are you in favor of adopting the proposed constitution?
Choice Votes %
Referendum passed Yes 14,976,561 90.67
No 743,869 9.33
Valid votes 15,720,430 78.96
Invalid or blank votes 4,188,330 21.04
Total votes 19,908,760 100.00
Registered voters/turnout 22,883,632 87.00
Source: Proclamation No. 1102, s. 1973

See also

External links