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Referendum in the Dominican Republic From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A referendum on leasing the Samaná Peninsula to the United States for 99 years was held in the Dominican Republic on 19 February 1873.[1] The proposal was approved by 99.91% of voters, but was never implemented after President Buenaventura Báez was overthrown on 2 January 1874.[1]
The Dominican Republic originally became independent from Haiti in 1844.[2] However, in 1861 the country was occupied by Spain following an inflation crisis.[2] In 1865 the country became independent again following the Restoration War.[2] By 1870 the country had significant debts caused by the ongoing civil war.[2] President Báez planned on selling the Samaná Peninsula to the United States for $1.1 million, whilst US President Ulysses S. Grant wanted to annex the entire country.[2] A treaty was signed between the two countries on 29 November 1869.[2] The US would purchase the Dominican Republic for $1.5 million and would lease the Samaná Peninsula for $147,229.91 for 99 years.[2] Although the proposal was approved in the 1870 referendum, the United States Senate rejected the annexation on 30 June 1870 with a 28–28 vote.[3]
However, Báez still required the money, and wanted to continue with the Samaná Peninsula leasing deal on the same terms.[1] The Senate of the Dominican Republic agreed to the proposal on 28 December 1872. The plebiscite was later carried out in the form of a register, in which invalid or blank voters were not possible.
Choice | Votes | % |
---|---|---|
For | 20,496 | 99.91 |
Against | 19 | 0.09 |
Invalid/blank votes | 0 | – |
Total | 20,515 | 100 |
Registered voters/turnout | ||
Source: Direct Democracy |
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