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Acceptée Fédéral Migration et asile Politique extérieure et Europe 09 février 2014

« Against Mass Immigration » (SVP initiative)

On 9 February 2014, the people and the cantons narrowly accepted the "against mass immigration" initiative launched by the SVP. With 50.3 % yes and a majority of 12 cantons and 5 half-cantons, the text won by just 19,516 votes.The…

Oui — 50.3% Non — 49.7%
Participation : 56.6%
L'enjeu de l'époque

On 9 February 2014, the people and the cantons narrowly accepted the "against mass immigration" initiative launched by the SVP. With 50.3 % yes and a majority of 12 cantons and 5 half-cantons, the text won by just 19,516 votes.

The initiative wrote a new Article 121a into the Constitution: Switzerland must "autonomously manage" immigration through annual caps and quotas, giving priority to the domestic workforce. A three-year deadline was set for implementation.

The result collided head-on with the free movement of persons agreement (FMPA) with the European Union, and thus with the entire Bilaterals I package. The campaign had pitted the SVP against a broad coalition of the Federal Council, SP, FDP, Centre, Greens and business circles.

More than ten years on, AfterVote tests the campaign promises against reality: the announced quotas, the level of immigration and the fate of the bilateral agreements.

Methodological note: This sheet treats the vote factually and in a non-partisan way. The verdicts concern only the verifiable campaign arguments — those that can be measured against the facts observed since the vote — and not the ballot result itself.
▲ Cantons that accepted
12 cantons and 5 half-cantons, mostly German-speaking, plus Ticino (68.2 %): Schwyz, Uri, Obwalden, Nidwalden, Glarus, Appenzell, St. Gallen, Thurgau, Schaffhausen, Aargau, Lucerne, Solothurn and Bern (51.1 %).
▼ Cantons that rejected
8 cantons and a half, mostly Latin and urban: Vaud (61.1 %), Geneva (60.9 %), Neuchâtel (60.7 %), Jura (55.9 %), Valais (51.7 %), Fribourg (51.5 %), plus Zurich and Basel-City.

Actors and personalities

Yes camp
SVP (initiators — Christoph Blocher, Toni Brunner)
AUNS (Campaign for an Independent Switzerland)
Lega dei Ticinesi (Ticino)
Sovereigntist and conservative circles
No camp
Federal Council (Simonetta Sommaruga in the lead)
SP, FDP, Centre, Greens and GLP
economiesuisse and the Swiss Employers’ Association
Trade unions (SGB) and academic circles
Worth noting: The cantons most exposed to immigration and cross-border workers (Geneva, Vaud, Zurich, Basel) rejected the text; Ticino, also heavily reliant on cross-border workers, gave it a landslide yes (68.2 %).

Arguments and verdicts

▲ Arguments FOR (SVP)
Switzerland regains autonomous control of immigration
« Switzerland autonomously manages the immigration of foreigners, through caps and quotas. »
— SVP initiative committee
✗ Argument refuted
The quota system for EU nationals was never introduced. To preserve the FMPA and the bilaterals, in December 2016 Parliament adopted a "light domestic preference": a mere obligation to report job vacancies in high-unemployment sectors (in force from 2018). Article 121a was not applied in its spirit.
Source : SEM; Parliament implementation law (2016).
Without a brake, immigration will stay massive
« Free movement causes uncontrolled immigration that weighs on the country. »
— SVP initiative committee
✓ Argument confirmed
Lacking quotas, net immigration stayed high and even set records: about 81,000 people in 2022 and nearly 99,000 in 2023 — the highest migration balance ever recorded. The resident population crossed 9 million in 2023.
Source : SEM, migration statistics; FSO.
▼ Arguments AGAINST (Federal Council, business)
The initiative endangers the bilateral agreements
« The text is incompatible with free movement and threatens the whole bilateral path. »
— Federal Council
✓~ Partly confirmed
As early as 2014, the EU suspended several files: Switzerland was downgraded to third-country status in Horizon 2020 and excluded from Erasmus+, and the Croatia extension protocol was frozen. A full rupture was avoided thanks to the 2016 "light" implementation; Switzerland rejoined Horizon 2020 in 2017.
Source : Le Temps; swissinfo; FDFA.
Free movement is vital and will be preserved
« Free movement is indispensable to Swiss prosperity. »
— economiesuisse / Federal Council
✓ Argument confirmed
Free movement was maintained. In September 2020, voters clearly rejected (61.7 % no) the SVP "limitation" initiative that sought to terminate it. The economy kept recruiting heavily across the EU.
Source : swissvotes; FSO.

Factual record

2
Confirmed
1
Partly confirmed
0
Partly refuted
1
Refuted
!
The quotas never came into being
Article 121a was implemented minimally, via a job-vacancy reporting requirement (2018), with no caps or quotas for EU citizens.
Source : SEM; Parliament.
~
Immigration stayed at record levels
Migration balance of about 81,000 (2022) and nearly 99,000 (2023), with a population now above 9 million.
Source : SEM; FSO.
~
The bilaterals wobbled, then held
Temporary exclusion from Horizon 2020 and Erasmus+ in 2014, return to Horizon 2020 in 2017, then rejection of the limitation initiative in 2020.
Source : Le Temps; swissinfo.
Analyse éditoriale
Conclusion

Ten years on, the "against mass immigration" initiative is a textbook case: a text accepted by the people but largely hollowed out at implementation. Faced with incompatibility with the FMPA, Parliament chose to preserve the bilateral path rather than apply quotas.

The outcome is paradoxical. The yes camp won the vote but lost on the essentials: no cap was introduced and immigration reached record levels. The SVP’s diagnosis of the scale of immigration proved correct, but its instrument — quotas — was never put into service.

The no camp saw its main fear partly materialise: Switzerland suffered a chill with Brussels, temporarily losing access to Horizon 2020 and Erasmus+. A full rupture was avoided, however, and free movement — confirmed by the rejection of the limitation initiative in 2020 — remained the bedrock of economic relations with the EU.

The migration question did not disappear, though: the SVP revived the debate with its "sustainability" initiative ("No 10-million Switzerland"), proof that the 2014 vote left a sense of unfinished business on both sides.