2021 Kyrgyz constitutional referendum
A constitutional referendum was held in Kyrgyzstan on 11 April 2021. The new constitution was approved by 85% of voters.
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Background
Following the 2020 parliamentary elections, protests started in October 2020 that led to the resignation of President Sooronbay Jeenbekov. In January 2021 a referendum on the form of government was held alongside presidential elections (won by Sadyr Japarov), with voters asked whether they would prefer a presidential system, a parliamentary system, or opposed both. Just over 84% voted in favour of a presidential system.
Work began on drafting a new constitution, which was debated in the Supreme Council in February 2021. The draft new constitution replaces a parliamentary system with a presidential one, with presidents limited to two five years terms instead of a single six-year term. It also reduces the number of seats in the Supreme Council from 120 to 90 and establishes a constitutional court.[1] The changes were described as moving "toward a form of presidentialism that is close to the authoritarian-style 'crown-presidentialism' in the post-Soviet Eurasian space."[2]
In March 2021 members of the Supreme Council passed a bill, scheduling a referendum on the new constitution for 11 April, the same day as local elections.[1]
Results
| Choice | Votes | % |
|---|---|---|
| 1,048,660 | 85.25 | |
| No | 181,370 | 14.75 |
| Valid votes | 1,230,030 | 93.08 |
| Invalid or blank votes | 91,472 | 6.92 |
| Total votes | 1,321,502 | 100.00 |
| Registered voters and turnout | 3,606,201 | 36.65 |
| Source: CEC | ||
Aftermath
The new constitution was adopted on 11 April 2021. President Japarov signed it on 5 May 2021.[3]
References
- Kyrgyzstan to hold constitution referendum on April 11 Interfax, 11 March 2021
- William Partlett, Kyrgyzstan’s 2021 Constitution: A Brief Comparative and Historical Analysis.
- "President Japarov signs new Constitution of Kyrgyzstan". akipress.com. Retrieved 5 May 2021..
