Greek plebiscite, 1968

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Greece

This article is part of the series:
Politics and government of
Greece







Other countries · Atlas
 Politics Portal
view  talk  edit

The Greek plebiscite of 29 September 1968 was held by the then ruling dictatorial regime to endorse, by public vote, the junta's new Constitution.

[edit] Background

A military junta, presided over by Colonel Georgios Papadopoulos, had ruled Greece since a group of middle-ranking officers staged a coup on 21 April 1967. King Constantine II reluctantly endorsed the coup, but started preparing for a counter-coup by elements of the armed forces loyal to him. This counter-coup was launched on 13 December 1967, and failed, forcing the King and the royal family to flee to Italy. In the aftermath of the royal coup attempt, the King was replaced by a Regent, General Georgios Zoitakis, and Papadopoulos assumed the post of Prime Minister.

On 16 December, Papadopoulos announced that the new constitution, which had been prepared by a committee of legal experts under Ch. Mitrelias, was to be formally presented to the people on 16 March 1968, and subsequently confirmed by a plebiscite in summer. The original draft of the Mitrelias Committee, however, was deemed too liberal, and was heavily amended in the following months. In its final form, as presented on 11 July 1968, it retained the monarchy, but granted the armed forces autonomy from govenrmental and parliamentary control and entrusted them with the role of guardians of the status quo, it imposed restrictions on political parties and established a constitutional watchdog, the Constitutional Court, with wide-ranging powers, to regulate the country's political life.

The referendum itself was proclaimed for September 29, and was regarded by the regime as a public vote of support on its policies. Participation was made obligatory and abstention punishable by imprisonment. The regime employed extensive propaganda in favour of "YES", while any opposition was silenced. The referendum's results were thus predictably in favour of the new constitution, but the vote, despite obligatory participation, was still marked by a high abstention, which reached over 22%.

Summary of the 29 September 1968 Greek Plebisciteedit Votes
No.
YES (NAI) 4,638,466 91.87
NO (OXI) 391,923 7.76
Valid votes 5,030,466
Invalid votes 18,515
Total number of votes 5,048,466
Registered voters 6,516,285
Source: Solon Grigoriadis, The History of the Dictatorship, Athens 1975, Vol. I, p. 225