The July National Charter 2025 was officially signed at South Plaza of the National Parliament by 25 political parties.
This historic agreement represents a consensus on constitutional, electoral, and administrative reforms following the July Revolution in 2024.
The interim government announces that the July Charter referendum will be held alongside national parliamentary elections
in the first half of February 2026. Voters will answer a single bundled question covering all four reform proposals.
Political parties reach agreement on 30 out of 48 proposed reforms, including term limits for Prime Minister,
separation of powers, enhanced fundamental rights, and stronger judicial independence. These consensual points
form the core of the July Charter.
Major political parties express concerns that the four-part referendum question is too complex for voters.
Critics argue that voters cannot separate support for some reforms from opposition to others, while supporters
see it as a historic moment of political consensus.