Switzerland-EU: the Swiss do not consider a double majority necessary Keystone-SDA
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More than half of Swiss people (51%) believe that a majority of the people is sufficient to approve or reject the new package of bilateral agreements with the European Union. A poll published on Saturday shows that 39% of Swiss people want a double majority of the people and the cantons.
This content was published on November 1, 2025 - 10:53
2 minutes
Keystone-SDA
Français
Suisse-UE: les Suisses ne jugent pas la double majorité nécessaire Original
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There are major differences depending on the language, sex and level of education of those question…
Switzerland-EU: the Swiss do not consider a double majority necessary Keystone-SDA
Generated with artificial intelligence.
More than half of Swiss people (51%) believe that a majority of the people is sufficient to approve or reject the new package of bilateral agreements with the European Union. A poll published on Saturday shows that 39% of Swiss people want a double majority of the people and the cantons.
This content was published on November 1, 2025 - 10:53
2 minutes
Keystone-SDA
Français
Suisse-UE: les Suisses ne jugent pas la double majorité nécessaire Original
+Get the most important news from Switzerland in your inbox
There are major differences depending on the language, sex and level of education of those questioned, according to this survey by the Demoscope institute for the Infosperber portal. While 53% of people in German-speaking Switzerland support a simple majority, only 45% in French-speaking Switzerland do so. Conversely, 38% of those polled in the German-speaking part of Switzerland and 43% in French-speaking Switzerland would like to see a double majority.
Similarly, 56% of men, compared with 46% of women, would be satisfied with a popular majority. And 57% of people with a high level of education reject a double majority, compared with 44% of people who have completed compulsory schooling or have an average level of education.
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Swiss Politics
The Swiss-EU bilateral treaty updates, explained
This content was published on Jan 29, 2025 Switzerland has negotiated a new agreement with the EU, marking a new chapter in the history of a complex relationship. What is set to change?
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Debates in Parliament
The consultation procedure ended on Friday. The federal government plans to submit its message to Parliament in the first quarter of 2026.
The two chambers will then have to decide whether to submit the package to an optional (simple majority) or mandatory (double majority) referendum. A vote is scheduled for 2027 at the earliest. The new agreements would then enter into force in 2028 at the earliest.
A total of 1,002 people were questioned in German- and French-speaking Switzerland between October 16 and 26. The margin of error is ± 3.1 percentage points.
Translated from French by DeepL/jdp
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