An analysis of the decisive national vote where Swiss citizens overwhelmingly rejected a 50% tax on large inheritances and a proposal for a mandatory civic service for all.

"The idea of a civic duty is not dead with today's vote. It will continue and I think it will win out in coming decades."
"This would have been a bad signal to wealthy people wanting to come to Switzerland and settle down in Switzerland."
Swiss voters have delivered a resounding, unambiguous verdict on the future of the nation's social and fiscal policy: a hard "No." In a decisive national vote on November 30, 2025, the electorate overwhelmingly spurned two ambitious initiatives, marking one of the most lopsided results in recent history. With turnout hovering around 43 percent, the message from the ballot box was clearâSwitzerland is not ready for radical experimentation.
The rejection rates are staggering. The proposal to introduce a mandatory civic service for all citizens was annihilated, with 84 percent of voters casting ballots against it. Simultaneously, the controversial plan to levy a 50 percent tax on inheritances exceeding 50 million CHF was struck down by 78 percent of the electorate. These figures represent not just a loss, but a total collapse of support for the initiators, landing among the worst results in a quarter-century of Swiss direct democracy.
While recent opinion polls had predicted a difficult path for both proposals, the sheer scale of the opposition has stunned political analysts. The electorate has firmly signaled that neither a drastic overhaul of the conscription system nor a punitive tax on the ultra-wealthy aligns with the current Swiss appetite for stability.
The "Initiative for a Future," spearheaded by the Young Socialists (Juso), aimed to revolutionize climate funding by targeting the pockets of the ultra-wealthy. Proposing a massive 50 percent tax on estates valued over 50 million CHF, the plan sought to generate an estimated 6 billion CHF annually for ecological transformation. Voters, however, saw it differently, rejecting the measure by a decisive 78 percent margin.
This result is a dramatic setback compared to the last inheritance tax vote in 2015, which managed to garner 29 percent support. The collapse to just 22 percent approval suggests that the specific mechanics of this proposalâparticularly the high tax rateâalienated even moderate voters. Critics, including a massive opposition campaign from the business sector, successfully argued that such a levy would trigger an exodus of capital.
Finance Minister Karin Keller-Sutter did not mince words following the result, stating, "This would have been a bad signal to wealthy people wanting to come to Switzerland and settle down." The fear that the estimated 2,500 affected households would simply leave the country, taking their tax revenue with them, resonated deeply with a pragmatic electorate focused on economic security.
The Civic Duty initiative, which sought to replace the male-only conscription model with a universal service requirement for all genders, suffered a historic defeat. Rejected by 84 percent of voters, the proposal failed to win a majority in a single canton. The initiative was caught in a brutal political pincer movement: the Left attacked it for burdening women with more unpaid labor, while the Right argued it would bloat the system and threaten military readiness.
Political scientist Corina Schena noted that the rejection was "more decisive" than expected, driven by strong opposition from both the Social Democratic Party (SP) and the Swiss People's Party (SVP). The government had argued that doubling the number of recruits would double costs without meeting actual needs.
Despite the crushing numbers, proponents remain defiant. Noemie Roten, head of the initiative committee, insisted the vote was merely the beginning of a longer conversation. "The idea of a civic duty is not dead with today's vote," Roten declared, drawing parallels to the long struggle for women's suffrage. However, with such a stark mandate against it, the path to "true equality" through mandatory service appears blocked for the foreseeable future.
While the domestic population delivered a knockout blow to the inheritance tax, the "Fifth Switzerland"âthe Swiss abroadâoffered a slightly softer landing. Data from 12 cantons reveals that while the diaspora still rejected the tax on the super-rich, they did so by a margin of nearly 67 percent. This represents a significant 12 percentage point gap compared to the national average.
Political scientist Martina Mousson describes this divergence as "notable," attributing it to the typically more left-wing and urban voting behavior of Swiss expats. The diaspora's voting patterns aligned more closely with urban centers like Zurich and Geneva, where approval for the tax hovered around 40 percent.
The argument that the tax would devastate family businessesâa dominant narrative within Switzerlandâlikely held less sway among those living abroad. Furthermore, the environmental aspect of the initiative may have resonated more strongly with the international community. However, even with this "honourable result" abroad, the initiative failed to secure a majority in any demographic, reinforcing the universality of the rejection.
For the Swiss government, Sunday's results are a vindication of the status quo. The decisive rejection of both initiatives is being interpreted as a vote of confidence in Switzerland's existing economic and social structures. Swiss President Karin Keller-Sutter was quick to frame the outcome as a victory for Swiss competitiveness.
"We already have a fair tax system," Keller-Sutter asserted, emphasizing that the wealthy already contribute significantly to the state's tasks. She dismissed the need for radical redistribution, noting that the current system works and that climate policy is already funded to the tune of 2 billion CHF annually.
The message to the world is one of continuity. By rejecting what officials termed "political experiments," voters have prioritized stability over ideological overhauls. The threat of companies and billionaires fleeing has been neutralized, at least for now. As the dust settles, the government looks to move forward without the looming specter of a fiscal shock, secure in the knowledge that the electorate has firmly backed the "Swiss model."