1973 American Samoan constitutional referendum

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1973 American Samoan constitutional referendum

November 6, 1973

Results
Choice
Votes %
Yes 1,097 34.35%
No 2,097 65.65%

A constitutional referendum was held in American Samoa on November 6, 1973.[1] Voters were asked to whether they approved of a new constitution,[2] The new constitution provided for the direct election of the Governor and Lieutenant Governor, a doubling of the salaries for members of the Fono,[3] issuing government bonds to raise money, and decentralizing some powers to counties and villages.[2]

As with the previous referendum in 1972, the proposals were rejected, with 34% in favor and 66% against.

Results[edit]

The new constitution was expected to be approved, but was rejected by nearly two-thirds of voters.[4]

ChoiceVotes%
For1,09734.35
Against2,09765.65
Total3,194100.00
Registered voters/turnout6,435
Source: PIM

Aftermath[edit]

An identical measure on directly electing the Governor would be put before voters two more times in 1974 and August 1976 until it was approved in November 1976.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Samoans Turn Down New Constitution The New York Times, 11 November 1973
  2. ^ a b Samoans reject constitution Pacific Islands Monthly, December 1973, p6
  3. ^ Turning point for American Samoans Pacific Islands Monthly, December 1973, p21
  4. ^ There were reasons enough why A. Samoans went conservative Pacific Islands Monthly, January 1974, p41