1802 French constitutional referendum

1802 referendum in France From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A referendum ratifying the new constitution of the Consulate, which made Napoleon Bonaparte First Consul for life, was held on 10 May 1802. The question asked to the voters was: "Should Napoleon Bonaparte be consul for life?".[1] Out of an electorate of 7 million, 3,653,600 voted in favor, and 8,374 voted against.[2]

Quick facts Results, Choice ...
1802 French constitutional referendum
10 May 1802 (1802-05-10)
Should Napoleon Bonaparte be consul for life?
Results
Choice
Votes %
Yes 3,653,600 99.77%
No 8,374 0.23%
Valid votes 3,661,974 100.00%
Invalid or blank votes 0 0.00%
Total votes 3,661,974 100.00%
Close

There was no secret ballot, with voters having to record their vote next to their name in registers of votes, thus forcing the opponents of Bonaparte to register themselves and to face potential police harassment.[1] Nevertheless, turnout increased by over 8 percentage points compared to the 1800 French constitutional referendum, with an additional 2.1 million voters voting yes at the ballot.[1][3] Given the turnout, the 1802 referendum is regarded as a success for the Napoleonic regime.[4]

Registry from Baix, Ardeche, about the 1802 referendum asking the question : "Will Napoleon Bonaparte be first consul for life ?"
More information Vote, % of votes ...
Vote % of votes Votes
Yes 99.77% 3,653,600
No 0.23% 8,374
Total 100%
Close
No :
8,374 (0.23%)
Yes :
3,653,600 (99.77%)
▲

References

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