2003 Qatari constitutional referendum

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2003 Qatari constitutional referendum

29 April 2003 (2003-04-29)

Results
Choice
Votes %
Yes 68,987 96.98%
No 2,145 3.02%
Valid votes 71,132 99.62%
Invalid or blank votes 274 0.38%
Total votes 71,406 100.00%

A referendum to approve a new constitution was held in Qatar on 29 April 2003. The constitution was overwhelmingly approved, with over 98% in favour. The population of the country was estimated to be around 790,000 at the time of the referendum with only 85,000 registered voters (because the majority of the population are foreign workers). Voter turnout was 84.3%.[1] With the referendum's approval, it also created a legislative body of which two-thirds would be elected by universal suffrage, and one third appointed by the Emir. According to the new constitution, the legislature will have three powers: to approve (but not prepare) the national budget; to monitor the performance of ministers through no-confidence votes; and to draft, discuss, and vote on proposed legislation, which becomes law only with the vote of a two-thirds majority and the Emir's endorsement.

Results[edit]

Option Votes %
Yes 69,987 98.39
No 1,145 1.61
Invalid votes 274
Total 71,665 100
Source: IFES Election Guide

See also[edit]

References[edit]