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The measure was approved by 95% of voters with a turnout of 96%. [2] It was the first of a series of referendums held by the German cabinet under Chancellor Adolf Hitler, after the cabinet conferred upon itself the ability to hold referendums on 14 July 1933. [3] The referendum question was on a separate ballot from the one used for the elections.
1933 German League of Nations withdrawal referendum; November 1933 German parliamentary election; V. ... This page was last edited on 2 February 2025, at 06:05 (UTC).
1926 German property expropriation referendum; 1929 German Young Plan referendum; 1931 Prussian Landtag referendum; 1933 German League of Nations withdrawal referendum; 1934 German head of state referendum; 1935 Saar status referendum; 1936 German parliamentary election and referendum; 1938 German parliamentary election and referendum; 1955 ...
1933, 12 November: Parliamentary elections and referendum on the withdrawal of Germany from the League of Nations. All Reichstag delegates are now Nazi Party members or sympathizers. According to formal results, 92% of the voters approved the referendum proposal.
1951 East German referendum; 1954 East German referendum; 1968 East German referendum; post-1990 Germany. 1995 Bavarian referendum on introduction of local referendums; 1998 Bavarian referendum on the abolition of the Bavarian Senate; 2010 Bavarian referendum on a smoking ban in gastronomy; 2011 Baden-Württemberg referendum on Stuttgart 21
5 March – German federal election, March 1933: National Socialists gain 43.9% of the votes. 8 March – Nazis occupy the Bavarian State Parliament and expel deputies. 12 March – Hindenburg bans the flag of the republic and orders the Imperial and Nazi flag to fly side by side. 15 March – Hitler proclaims the Third Reich.
Ecuador's electoral court set April 21 for a referendum on measures to tighten security, fight organised crime and reform the constitution, it said on Wednesday, amid worsening conflict between ...
A referendum would also be held if 10% of eligible voters proposed an initiative. [12] On 14 July 1933, the German cabinet used the Enabling Act to pass the "Law concerning the Plebiscite", [13] which permitted the cabinet to call a referendum on "questions of national policy" and "laws which the cabinet had enacted". [14]