2001 Senegalese constitutional referendum|
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| Choice | Votes | % |  
|  Yes | 1,559,432 | 94.02% |  
|  No | 99,108 | 5.98% |  
| Valid votes | 1,658,540 | 98.42% |  
| Invalid or blank votes | 26,622 | 1.58% |  
| Total votes | 1,685,162 | 100.00% |  
| Registered voters/turnout | 2,563,422 | 65.74% |  | 
A constitutional referendum was held in Senegal on 7 January 2001. Voters were asked whether they approved of a new constitution. It was approved by 94% of voters,[1] leading to early parliamentary elections taking place in April 2001.
Background
The proposed constitution would abolish the Senate, which had only come into existence in 1999; its first election had been boycotted by the opposition parties, who viewed its creation as unnecessary. It also reduced the presidential term from seven to five years.[1]
Result
| Choice | Votes | % | 
|---|
| For | 1,559,432 | 94.02 | 
| Against | 99,108 | 5.98 | 
| Total | 1,658,540 | 100.00 | 
|  | 
| Valid votes | 1,658,540 | 98.42 | 
|---|
| Invalid/blank votes | 26,622 | 1.58 | 
|---|
| Total votes | 1,685,162 | 100.00 | 
|---|
| Registered voters/turnout | 2,563,522 | 65.74 | 
|---|
| Source: African Elections Database | 
References