Geneva adopts lower hurdles for initiatives

Published: Sunday, Mar 3rd 2024, 13:01

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In the canton of Geneva, the number of signatures required for constitutional and legislative initiatives will be reduced. This was decided by voters on Sunday. Geneva is the only canton in Switzerland to adjust the number of signatures required in line with population growth.

In the canton of Geneva, the threshold to date has been 3 percent of voters for a total or partial revision of the cantonal constitution and 2 percent for a legislative initiative or an optional referendum. The exact number of signatures required is updated every year.

With the amendment that has now been adopted, the percentages for constitutional initiatives will be reduced from 3 to 2 percent and for legislative initiatives and optional referendums from 2 to 1.5 percent of those eligible to vote.

Romand's strings

In Switzerland, the number of signatures required and the collection deadlines vary greatly from canton to canton. French-speaking Switzerland and Ticino are the strictest: In Jura, the limit is 3.4 percent of those eligible to vote, in Neuchâtel 3.3 percent and in Ticino 3.1 percent for a cantonal initiative to come into being. In addition to Geneva with 3 percent for constitutional initiatives, the quota in Basel-Stadt, Graubünden, Fribourg, Vaud and Zug is over 2.5 percent.

In contrast, Zurich requires the fewest signatures to submit an initiative: 0.65% of voters are required there. Aargau and the cantons of Baselland, Nidwalden and Appenzell-Ausserrhoden also require less than 1 percent.

At federal level, initiative committees must collect at least 100,000 signatures. This corresponds to 1.8 percent of the voting population in Switzerland - a quota equivalent to that in Valais and Lucerne.

From 250 to 15,000 signatures

In absolute terms, Bern has the strictest requirements: The canton requires 15,000 signatures (2 percent of those eligible to vote) for a cantonal popular initiative to come into being. It is followed by Vaud (12,000), Geneva (8,219) and St. Gallen (8,000).

Zurich, the most populous canton in the country, only requires 6000, the same number as Fribourg. At the other end of the spectrum, 250 signatures are enough to validate an initiative in Nidwalden and 300 in Appenzell Ausserrhoden.

The deadlines for collecting signatures also vary considerably from canton to canton. While initiators have 18 months at federal level, the period in the canton of Nidwalden is two months. In the cantons of Fribourg, Ticino, Vaud, Geneva and St. Gallen, the deadline is less than six months.

In Baselland, the period is the longest at 24 months. In Schaffhausen, Obwalden, Schwyz, Zug and Appenzell Ausserrhoden there are no time limits.

Special case of the Landsgemeinde

There are other special features in some cantons. In Glarus and Appenzell Innerrhoden, there are no cantonal initiatives that lead to a vote at the ballot box, as these cantons still hold a Landsgemeinde. At the Landsgemeinde, a single person with voting rights can submit a proposal to amend the constitution.

The cantons of Solothurn, Jura and Graubünden also have a municipal initiative, which means that municipalities can launch an initiative. In Solothurn ten, in Jura five and in Graubünden one seventh of all municipalities are required.

©Keystone/SDA

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