Swiss Federal Constitution, 1874

Switzerland employs mandatory referendums as a tool of direct democracy.[1]

This type of referendum is utilized after an item has been passed by parliament and is then put to a vote. In contrast, an optional referendum is only held after a certain number of citizens or cantons request it.

At the federal level, Article 140, paragraph 1[2] of the Federal Constitution mandates compulsory voting on revisions to the Federal Constitution, the collective security organization membership (e.g., NATO), supranational communities (e.g., the EU), federal laws that lack a constitutional basis and are valid for more than a year (an emergency procedure). Article 140 paragraph 2[3] of the Federal Constitution mandates that only the people vote on certain matters, primarily as a component of the procedure for the comprehensive revision of the Federal Constitution.[4]

At the cantonal level, each federated state's constitution regulates which matters necessitate a mandatory referendum. Consequently, there exist various scenarios. Nonetheless, all cantons must subject the revision of their constitution to a mandatory referendum (article 51[5]). Some states also subject all state laws to a compulsory referendum, as well as any expense that exceeds a certain amount (referred to as a "financial" referendum).

Referendum results

Mandatory referendums[6][7] 1848-1950 1951-1980 1981-2020 (mar.) Total
Accepted 43 58 73 174
Rejected 20 17 29 66
Total 63 75 102 240

References

  1. ChF, Chancellerie fédérale. "La Confédération en bref". www.bk.admin.ch (in French). Retrieved 2020-03-25.
  2. "Article 140 Constitution fédérale de la Confédération suisse". Confédération suisse.
  3. "Article 140 Constitution fédérale Suisse". Constitution Suisse.
  4. "Lexique du Parlement". L'Assemblée fédérale: le Parlement suisse.
  5. "Article 51 Constitution fédérale Suisse". Constitution Suisse.
  6. "Liste des votations en suisse". Chancellerie fédérale Suisse (in Français, Allemand, Italien, Romanche, and Anglais). Retrieved 25.03.2020.
  7. Office fédéral de la Statistique. "Votations". www.bfs.admin.ch (in French). Retrieved 2020-03-25.

See also

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