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2026 Swiss referendums

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2026 Swiss referendums

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8 March 2026
"Cash is freedom" initiative
For
45.61%
Against
54.39%
Counter-proposal to the cash initiative
For
73.39%
Against
26.61%
SRG Initiative
For
38.05%
Against
61.95%
Climate Fund Initiative
For
29.29%
Against
70.71%
Individual taxation
For
54.26%
Against
45.74%
14 June 2026 (2026-06-14)
"No to ten-million Switzerland" initiative
For
45.21%
Against
54.79%
Amendment to the Civilian Service Act
For
52.46%
Against
47.54%

Several referendums were held in Switzerland during 2026, with national votes on 8 March, 14 June, 27 September and 29 November.[1]

March referendums

[edit]

Four referendums were held on 8 March: Initiatives on cash, public broadcasting, a climate fund and individual taxation.[2][3]

The voters were asked whether to cap the annual license fee for the Swiss Broadcasting Corporation at 200 francs while exempting other companies from the levy, whether to introduce individual taxation requiring married couples to file separate tax returns, whether to create a federal climate fund, and whether to protect cash in the constitution by guaranteeing that coins and banknotes remain in circulation.[2]

One referendum on the individual taxation passed, and also the counterproposal for the initiative on cash passed, which sets a mandate to protect access to cash, while avoiding rigid constitutional limits on payments,[4] while the rest of referendums were rejected.

Results

[edit]
Question For Against Invalid/
blank
Total
votes
Turnout Outcome
Votes % Cantons Votes % Cantons
"Cash is freedom" initiative 1,380,852 45.61 9+02 1,646,498 54.39 11+62 55.37 Rejected
Counter-proposal to the cash initiative 2,168,295 73.39 20+62 786,049 26.61 0+02 55.37 Approved
SRG Initiative 1,188,289 38.05 0+02 1,934,369 61.95 20+62 55.80 Rejected
Climate Fund Initiative 897,216 29.29 0+02 2,165,495 70.71 20+62 55.56 Rejected
Individual taxation 1,662,017 54.26 9+22 1,401,166 45.74 11+42 55.66 Approved
Source: Federal Chancellery[5]

June referendums

[edit]

Two referendums were held on 14 June.[6] One of them, "No to ten million Switzerland" [de], sought to cap the country's permanent resident population at 10 million by 2050. It was promoted by the Swiss People's Party.[7][8][9] The other sought to reduce the number of people switching to civilian alternatives to their compulsory military service.[7]

Referendum on capping the country's permanent resident population was rejected, while amendment to the Civilian Service Act has passed.

No to ten million Switzerland

[edit]
The results of the referendum on No to ten million Switzerland by canton. Red indicates opposition and green supports

A December 2025 poll found that 48% of respondents were in favor of the initiative, while 41% said they were against it.[a] A September 2025 poll found that 48% of respondents were in favor of the initiative, while 45% said they were against it.[10]

During the campaign the (SVP) Swiss People's Party, (EDU) Federal Democratic Union of Switzerland, (MCG) Geneva Citizens' Movement and Swiss Democrats supported the Yes vote.[11]

(EVP) Evangelical People's Party of Switzerland, (FDP) The Liberals, (GLP) Green Liberal Party of Switzerland, (GPS) Green Party of Switzerland, Centre, (PdA) Swiss Party of Labour and (SP) Social Democratic Party of Switzerland supported the No vote.[12]

Results

[edit]
Question For Against Invalid/
blank
Total
votes
Turnout Outcome
Votes % Cantons Votes % Cantons
"No to ten-million Switzerland" initiative 1,492,603 45.21 8+42 1,808,916 54.79 12+22 58.86 Rejected
Referendum on the Civilian Service Act 1,690,343 52.46 17+52 1,531,878 47.54 3+12 58.26 Approved
Source: Federal Statistical Office[13][14]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ 88% of Swiss People's Party (SVP) supporters supported it; 42% of The Centre voters supported it, while 43% were against it; and 46% of FDP.The Liberals supporters supported it, while 38% opposed it. 73% of Social Democratic Party of Switzerland and 72% of Green Party of Switzerland supporters opposed it.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Votes for the next 20 years". Federal Chancellery (in French). Archived from the original on 22 August 2025. Retrieved 9 February 2025.
  2. ^ a b "Swiss voters to decide on four issues in March 2026". Le News. 7 November 2025. Retrieved 28 November 2025.
  3. ^ "Swiss to vote on tax and license fee initiatives in March". SWI swissinfo.ch. 5 November 2025. Retrieved 28 November 2025.
  4. ^ "Switzerland Cash Vote March 9: Voters Reject Initiative, Back Counterproposal". Meyka. Retrieved 9 March 2026.
  5. ^ "Volksabstimmung vom 08.03.2025". Federal Chancellery (in German). Retrieved 8 March 2026.
  6. ^ "Votes to limit immigration and reform civil service set for June, 14th". Le News. 12 February 2026. Retrieved 14 February 2026.
  7. ^ a b "Swiss voters to decide on population cap and civilian service reform". SWI swissinfo. 11 February 2026. Retrieved 12 February 2026.
  8. ^ Ruehl, Mercedes (11 February 2026). "Switzerland to vote on plan to cap population at 10mn". Financial Times. Retrieved 12 February 2026.
  9. ^ Firsova, Tatiana (11 February 2026). "Switzerland to Vote on Capping Population at 10 Million". New York Times. Retrieved 12 February 2026.
  10. ^ Bachmann, Helena (9 December 2025). "Latest polls reveal Swiss anti-immigration initiative has strong voter support". The Local. Retrieved 12 February 2026.
  11. ^ [1]
  12. ^ [2]
  13. ^ "Popular initiative: 'No to Switzerland of 10 million! (Sustainability Initiative)'". Federal Statistical Office. Retrieved 14 June 2026.
  14. ^ "Amendment to the Civilian Service Act". Federal Statistical Office. Retrieved 14 June 2026.