2012 Slovenian Family Code referendum
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Are you in favor of the implementation of the Family Code (DZ), which was adopted by the National Assembly at its session on 16 June 2011? | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Results | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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UN Member State |
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A referendum was held in Slovenia on 25 March 2012 on the new family code passed by the then-governing coalition led by Borut Pahor. The code was rejected with 54.55% of voters against the law.[1]
Background
[edit]The family code bill passed by the government of Borut Pahor which expanded existing same-sex registered partnerships to have all rights of married couples, except adoption (excluding step-child adoption). The law also expanded provisions protecting the rights of children, such as outlawing corporal punishment and establishing a children's ombudsman. A conservative group "Civil Initiative for the Family and the Rights of Children", led by the activist and philosopher Aleš Primc (member of the conservative-centrist Slovenian People's Party),[2] opposed to same-sex unions gathered the required signatures to force a referendum on the law.[3]
Opinion polls
[edit]A February/March poll carried out by Delo found that 35.9% of the respondents would vote to uphold the law, while 26.3% said they would vote to repeal it and 20.9% were undecided. The remaining 16.9% of the respondents said they would not attend the referendum. The poll was conducted on 29 February and 1 March among 504 respondents.[4]
A Ninamedia poll for PlanetSiol.net carried out between 13 and 15 March 2012 found that 47.2% of the respondents would vote to uphold a law, while 40.4% said they would vote to repeal it and 12.4% were undecided. The poll was based on the responses of 700 people.[5]
Another Delo poll conducted between 14 and 20 March among 709 respondents found that 46.9% of the respondents would vote to uphold a law, while 29.2% said they would vote to repeal it and 16.4% were undecided. The remaining 7.5% of the respondents didn't want to respond. Among those who said that they would definitely or probably attend the referendum, 60% said that they would vote to uphold a law while 40% said they would vote to repeal it.[6]
Results
[edit]The law was rejected by voters. Voter turnout was 30.3%.[1]
Choice | Votes | % | |
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For | 233,268 | 45.45 | |
Against | 279,937 | 54.55 | |
Total | 513,205 | 100.00 | |
Valid votes | 513,205 | 99.06 | |
Invalid/blank votes | 4,893 | 0.94 | |
Total votes | 518,098 | 100.00 | |
Registered voters/turnout | 1,709,417 | 30.31 | |
Source: DVK |
See also
[edit]- 2013 Croatian constitutional referendum
- 2015 Slovak same-sex marriage referendum
- Bermudian Marriage Referendum, 2016
References
[edit]- ^ a b Zakonodajni referendum o družinskem zakoniku 2012 Drzavna volilna komisija
- ^ "Spletni portet: Aleš Primc, filozof, ki ve, kaj je prava družina".
- ^ Family Law Referendum Signatures Filed Archived 2013-12-03 at the Wayback Machine, STA
- ^ The Prospects of Family Law Referendum, Slovenia Times
- ^ Anketa: Večina podpira družinski zakonik, Planet Siol.net
- ^ "Anketa Dela: Za zakonik in Jankovića". Archived from the original on 2012-03-24. Retrieved 2012-03-23.