2014 Slovenian archives law referendum
| ||||||||||||||||||||||
Are you in favor of the Act on Amendments and Supplements to the Act on the Protection of Documentary and Archival Material and Archives (ZVDAGA-A), adopted by the National Assembly at its session on January 28, 2014? | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Results | ||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
UN Member State |
---|
A referendum on the archive law was held in Slovenia on 8 June 2014. Voters were asked whether they were in favor of the amendments to the law that were passed in January 2014. The amendments were rejected by 67% of voters, although the referendum was invalidated by "no" voters accounting for only 7.79% of all registered voters, well below the 20% quorum.
Background
[edit]The referendum was initiated by Eva Irgl, an MP for the Slovenian Democratic Party (SDS),[1] following a decision by the National Assembly on 28 January 2014 to amend the law on the national archives. The amendment would result in the anonymisation of personal data of people working for and victims of the Yugoslav-era secret services.[2] The party collected over 40,000 signatures, enough to force a referendum.[3]
The referendum was originally set to be held on 4 May following a decree in the National Assembly. However, the SDS appealed to the Supreme Court, claiming that the date was inappropriate, as early voting would coincide with the May Day public holiday. The appeal was unanimously upheld by the Court, who ordered the National Assembly to set a new date within seven days. The Court also ruled against the National Assembly claim that the referendum could not be held in parallel with the European Parliament elections on 25 May. This date had been favoured by the referendum's initiators, as a constitutional amendment in 2012 had introduced new quorum requirement requiring a minimum turnout for a law to be rejected. The Constitution states that a law is rejected in a referendum if a majority of voters who have cast valid votes vote against the law, provided at least one fifth of all qualified voters have voted against.[4]
On 24 April the National Assembly approved holding the referendum on 8 June. The SDS claimed it would challenge the new date in the Supreme Court.[5]
Results
[edit]Choice | Votes | Votes % | Turnout % |
---|---|---|---|
For | 64,571 | 32.63 | 3.77 |
Against | 133,347 | 67.37 | 7.79 |
Total valid votes | 197,918 | 100 | 11.56 |
Invalid/blank votes | 3,129 | 0.18 | |
Total votes cast | 201,047 | 11.74 | |
Registered voters | 1,712,733 | 100 | |
Source: Government of Slovenia |
Although a majority of voters who cast valid votes voted against the law, the second constitutional requirement that at least one fifth of all qualified voters have voted against the law was not met.
References
[edit]- ^ Archives Law Referendum Initiative Archived 2014-05-18 at the Wayback Machine Slovenian Embassy in Washington, 17 February 2014
- ^ Slovenian archives must remain open Platform of European Memory and Conscience, 11 February 2014
- ^ SDS gathered enough signatures for a referendum on archives RTV Slovenia, 20 March 2014
- ^ Archive Referendum Comedy Continues Slovenia Times, 17 April 2014
- ^ Archives Referendum to Be Held on 8 June Slovenia Times, 25 April 2014