Gibraltar as a territorial dispute has many issues at stake. Potentially,
many remedies could apply. The previous posts presented brief background
information and a few views that included references to law and politics, the
European Union, NATO, natural resources, defence, and many others.
Today’s post centres the attention of one of these parties: people. What do
Gibraltarians want?
Several
documents give us a clear idea of what Gibraltarians want. The 1967 and 2002
referendums made evident Gibraltarians want to remain under British
sovereignty. Yet, in 2016, the Gibraltarians made explicit their wishes to
remain in the European Union. Information about each of these cases below.
The 2002 Referendum in Gibraltar
The question:
"On the 12th July 2002 the
Foreign Secretary, Jack Straw, in a formal statement in the House of Commons,
said that after twelve months of negotiation the British Government and Spain
are in broad agreement on many of the principles that should underpin a lasting
settlement of Spain's sovereignty claim, which included the principle that
Britain and Spain should share sovereignty over Gibraltar.
Do you approve of the principle that Britain and Spain should share
sovereignty over Gibraltar?
YES/NO”
The results: the no vote was 98.9 percent, with 17,900 no ballots
cast, 187 yes votes and 72 blank votes.
Documents available at:
The 1967 Referendum in Gibraltar
Gibraltarians had two
choices:
“(a) To pass
under Spanish sovereignty in accordance with the terms proposed by the Spanish
Government to Her Majesty's Government on 18 May 1966; or
(b) Voluntarily retain their link with Britain,
with democratic local institutions and with Britain retaining its present
responsibilities.”
The results: turnout of 95.8%, 12,237 cast their vote, of which
12,138 voted for Britain and only 44 for Spain, with 55 spoiled ballot papers.
More information available at
Brexit and the 2016 Referendum in Gibraltar
On 23 June 2016, people across the
United Kingdom and Gibraltar voted in a referendum on the UK’s membership of
the European Union. Gibraltar was included in the South West
electoral region.
The question:
“Should the
United Kingdom remain a member of the European Union or leave the European
Union?
Remain a
member of the European Union
Leave the
European Union”
The results:
- Remain: 19,322
- Leave: 823
- Electorate: 24,119
- Verified Ballot Papers: 20,172
- Turnout: 83.7%
- Ballot Papers Counted : 20,172
- Valid Votes: 20,145
- Rejected Ballots: 27
Complete results
available at
Details about the EU
Referendum question available at
“For now it is
early to know what the future will bring, but the first movements, as in chess,
are decisive, and Spain has begun to move the pawns. The draft guidelines for
negotiation between the EU and the United Kingdom referred by Donald Tusk (note
25 in the original) not only ignored completely the possibility
that Gibraltar had a special, unique status in the future, as requested by Fabián Picardo, but
that the European Council gives, de facto, veto power over the future of the Rock to
Spain (Brzenczek, 2016).”
Complete article
(in Spanish) available at
GIBRALTAR: DEL TRATADO DE UTRECHT AL BREXIT
11th April 2018
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