1964 Ghanaian constitutional referendum

1964 Ghanaian constitutional referendum

31 January 1964

Results
Choice
Votes %
Yes 2,773,920 99.91%
No 2,452 0.09%
Valid votes 2,776,372 100.00%
Invalid or blank votes 0 0.00%
Total votes 2,776,372 100.00%

A constitutional referendum was held in Ghana on 31 January 1964. The proposed amendments to the constitution would turn the country into a one-party state and increase the powers of President Kwame Nkrumah and make him president for life. With results showing that an implausible 99.91% of voters supported the amendments, the referendum was accused of being "obviously rigged".[1] Voter turnout was reported to be 96.5%.[2]

  1. ^ Seth Anthony (1969) "The State of Ghana", African Affairs Vol. 68, No. 273, pp337–339
  2. ^ Milutin Tomanović (1965) Hronika međunarodnih događaja 1964, Institute of International Politics and Economics, p240 (in Serbo-Croatian)