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1946 Greek referendum

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1946 referendum in Greece on maintaining the monarchy; passed

1946 Greek referendum

1 September 1946 (1946-09-01)
Results
Choice
Votes%
Yes1,136,28968.41%
No524,77131.59%
Valid votes1,661,06099.77%
Invalid or blank votes3,8600.23%
Total votes1,664,920100.00%
Registered voters/turnout1,921,72586.64%
This article is part ofa series on
Politics of Greece
Anti-communist poster during the referendum in favour ofGeorge II: "This is what they fear! Vote for the King!"

A referendum on maintaining the monarchy was held inGreece on 1 September 1946.[1] The proposal was approved by 68.4% of voters with a turnout of 88.6%.[2]

Background

[edit]

The referendum was the fourth since 1920 on the country's monarchy. The1946 parliamentary elections, in which the right-wing parties achieved a landslide, had just taken place. The new conservative government ofKonstantinos Tsaldaris was favorable toGeorge II, but what influenced the result more was the atmosphere of imminentcivil war.[citation needed]

The civil war convulsed Greece during two main periods: first between 1943 and 1944 between theKKE-dominatedEAM/ELAS partisans and theright-wing resistance groups and the internationally recognizedGreek government-in-exile which had returned to the country in November 1944 and later in 1946–1949. Thecollaborationist government collapsed after the Germans had left, and all of its leaders were in custody. EAM/ELAS, which controlled much of the countryside, expected to take over until it realized thatStalin had conceded Greece to the British atYalta. It believed that it was essential to seize control of the capital and to create "facts on the ground." EAM/ELAS heavily outnumbered and outgunned government forces and came within a hair's breadth of success.Churchill moved quickly to transfer two British divisions from Italy, and after a month of fighting, they decisively defeated the Greek communists.

The referendum took place, after EAM/ELAS had been defeated in theDekemvriana. Although it had agreed to disarm at theTreaty of Varkiza, in January 1945, it surrendered only a few token weapons and withdrew into the mountainous areas of Greece, where it had effective control. In retaliation for theRed Terror, right-wing groups, often with the tacit support of the security forces, persecuted communists in areas not under communist control, theWhite Terror. This deepened the gulf between the left-wing and the centrist and right-wing parties and polarised the political spectrum so that the centrist parties, which followed a more moderate but also a more ambiguous policy, lost part of their power.

The KKE boycotted both the elections and the referendum and instead launched the second phase of the civil war. It prevented any voting in areas that it controlled. George II symbolized the unity of the anti-communist forces, which partly explains the percentage of votes in his favour. The conservatives, along with Prime MinisterKonstantinos Tsaldaris, supported him, but the centrists were divided. The centrists regarded George II with displeasure but reacted with disgust at the savagery of the communists.[citation needed]

The official report of the Allied Mission to Observe the Greek Elections [AMFOGE] acknowledged the existence of voter fraud despite its vested interest in legitimising the election: "There is no doubt in our minds that the party representing the government view exercised undue influence in securing votes in support of the return of the King". It, however, claimed that without the said influence, the monarchy would still have prevailed in the election.[3]

Results

[edit]
ChoiceVotes%
For1,136,28968.4
Against524,77131.6
Invalid/blank votes3,8600.2
Total1,664,920100
Registered voters/turnout1,921,72586.6
Source: Nohlen & Stöver

References

[edit]
  1. ^Dieter Nohlen & Philip Stöver (2010)Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p830ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7
  2. ^Nohlen & Stöver, p838
  3. ^"Foreign Relations of the United States, 1946, the Near East and Africa, Volume VII – Office of the Historian".
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