That's great news for Serbia and Georgia - the majority polls are striking and I notice both seem to recognise and seek the political stability a constitutional monarch brings, as well as the restoration of a traditional rather than imposed form of government.
Who else?
Nepal is I think the strongest contender: the Indian government supported the abolition in 2006, but the (predictable) chaos afterwards and the rise of Modi and his strongly Hindu party in India could produce a reverse in policy.
Nepal still has no agreed constitution and the people are becoming increasingly restless and violent. There's an agreed king in waiting, the return to monarchy has a fair amount of popular support and it would be the obvious solution to avoid splitting down ethnic lines or sliding back into civil war.
I still have some hope for Fiji, though despite popular sentiment its chances still look remote. The prime minister may call himself a monarchist but he's wiped out several traces of the past, including now a change of national flag.
Ethiopia? Afghanistan? Eh… not likely.