About these notes. This is the sub-topic lookup version. For the narrative scrollytelling lesson with the referendum, case-for and case-against figures, use the Walk-through. For active recall, use the MCQ Quiz. The devolution settlements the referendums built live in the Devolution pack, and the wider direct-democracy frame lives in the Democracy pack. The cards below cover the constitutional position, the named referendums, the case for, the case against, the reform agenda and the exam method.
Likely exam angles. The 30-marker lands on one of three debates: referendums used for political purposes rather than democracy (2024 Q1b); more disadvantages than advantages (2023 Q2a); or whether referendums belong in a representative democracy at all. Each one is covered in the cards below.
| Referendum | Result | What it proves |
|---|---|---|
| 1997 Scotland | 74% Yes | The strongest founding mandate of any settlement - Holyrood politically irreversible ever since. |
| 1997 Wales | 50.3% Yes on a 50% turnout | The weakest founding consent - the 2023 MS reads it as support from around a quarter of the electorate, and concludes thresholds should be set. Repaired by the 63% Yes of 2011 (primary law-making powers). |
| 1998 Good Friday | Approved on both sides of the border; over 80% in Northern Ireland | The peace settlement - the change Westminster alone could not have legitimised (2023 MS). |
| 2004 North East | Regional assembly rejected by 78% | The device as a check on government - it killed the English regional assembly plan. |
| 2011 AV | No 67-33 | A settled answer on electoral reform - and the 2024 MS's coalition-price case: the vote was the price paid to the Lib Dems, and a safe choice for the Conservatives. |
| 2014 Scottish independence | No 55-45 on an 84.6% turnout | The highest UK referendum turnout ever, with 16-17 year olds voting - but the question did not stay settled. |
| 2016 EU membership | Leave 51.9-48.1 on a 72.2% turnout | The largest direct-democracy vote in UK history - run with no threshold, a simple-majority rule and a binary question on a complex choice. |