FILE - In this picture taken May 24, 2012 a referendum poster, is photographed in Geneva, Switzerland, urging Swiss voters to reject a proposal to automatically hold a referendum whenever the government signs an important international treaty. Poster reads . Too much Democracy kills Democracy, and at bottom : No. Swiss voters appear to have decided that they have enough democracy already. A nationalist group in the already referendum-happy Alpine republic wanted voters to have an automatic say every time their government signs an important international treaty. But Swiss television reported that the proposal was headed for a heavy defeat. Citing projections by the gfs.bern polling institute based on exit polls and partial counting of Sunday's June 17, 2012 ballots, it said 75 percent voted against and only 25 percent in favor. (AP Photo/Frank Jordans)
FILE - In this picture taken May 24, 2012 a referendum poster, is photographed in Geneva, Switzerland, urging Swiss voters to reject a proposal to automatically hold a referendum whenever the government signs an important international treaty. Poster reads . Too much Democracy kills Democracy, and at bottom : No. Swiss voters appear to have decided that they have enough democracy already. A nationalist group in the already referendum-happy Alpine republic wanted voters to have an automatic say every time their government signs an important international treaty. But Swiss television reported that the proposal was headed for a heavy defeat. Citing projections by the gfs.bern polling institute based on exit polls and partial counting of Sunday's June 17, 2012 ballots, it said 75 percent voted against and only 25 percent in favor. (AP Photo/Frank Jordans)
GENEVA (AP) ? Swiss voters decided on Sunday that they have enough democracy already, overwhelmingly rejecting a proposal to hold more referendums on international treaties.
A nationalist group in the already referendum-happy Alpine republic wanted voters to have an automatic say every time their government signs an important international agreement.
However, not one of the country's 26 cantons, or states, voted in favor of more referendums in Sunday's referendum, and 75.2 percent of voters rejected the plan. Such proposals need a majority of both voters and cantons to pass.
Most major parties opposed the measure, saying it could gridlock Swiss democracy with constant ballot calls ? as one pre-vote poster put it, "too much democracy kills democracy." Switzerland already holds about half a dozen national referendums each year as well as local ones.
The Action for an Independent and Neutral Switzerland group, which made the proposal, said it wanted referendums whenever Switzerland submits to a foreign law or court ? particularly if it involves the European Union. Switzerland does not belong to the 27-nation bloc but is surrounded by it.
The right-wing Swiss People's Party, the only major party backing the plan, said Sunday's rejection "was predictable given the opponents' massive campaign of fear."
As things stand, all it takes is 50,000 signatures to force a national vote on a new law or treaty in Switzerland, a country of more than 7 million people. The bar is higher ? 100,000 signatures ? if grassroots groups want to propose completely new legislation, but such measures also are voted on frequently and sometimes succeed.
Turnout in Swiss referendums rarely exceeds 40 percent. On Sunday, it was 37.8 percent.
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