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As you may have heard, when we British Columbians go to the
polls for the May 18th provincial election we'll actually
be voting twice. Along with electing members of the Provincial
parliament we'll also be voting on a referendum asking if
we want to change BC's electoral system. Specifically, we'll
be asked if we want to swap our present voting system with
the "STV electoral system as recommended by the Citizen's
Assembly on Electoral Reform." I'm voting no.
Now as you'll remember if you read that little interview
thing I did a few weeks ago, I was initally very excited
and encouraged by Premier Campbell's decision to form a "citizens
assembly" to investigate the flaws and merits of our
current electoral system. The idea of appointing 161 ordinary
British Columbians from across the province to freely debate
and discuss political reform was a truly creative and revolutionary
idea. Whatever his other faults may be, Campbell deserves
honest praise for being courageous enough to follow through
with the bold plan.
That being said, while the citizen assembly was a nice forum
for discussion, it was hardly inevitable that the 161 member
panel would come up with a good recommendation for change.
Their decision to recommend the so-called "single transferable
vote" (STV) system to the province is a deeply flawed,
and indeed even somewhat baffling conclusion. The committee
that was supposed to represent the voices of "average"
British Columbians have ended up suggesting a solution to
our voting woes that is so complex and sophisticated it requires
a team of political scientists to successfully explain. The
decision was clearly spurned on by the council's egghead academic
"advisors" and almost certainly not one that the
committee members would have ever reached independently. The
whole thing reeks of a political fad.
A good rule of thumb in life is to never sign or vote for
anything you don't understand. I'm majoring in political science,
and I still don't fully understand the STV system. For a while
I was thinking it would be cute if sometime before the election
I could do a special feature for the OP explaining the STV
system using little cartoon illustrations. But the damn system
is so complicated even cartoons can't explain it. It cannot
be simplified, it's just that bizarre. Trying to describe
it in less than a thousand words is hopelessly misleading,
while accurately describing it with more than a thousand words
is migraine-inducing.
I don't know if you ever watch South Park, but there
was this one episode where there were a gang of gnomes who
stole underpants from children at night. When asked to explain
why they did it, the Gnomes replied "profit." When
asked to explain in greater detail, the Gnomes replied "stage
one, get underpants. Stage two...... Stage three, profit!"
It's the same with STV. Stage one, rank all the candidates
in order of preference. Stage two...... Stage three, people
are elected and somehow everything ends up being more fair
and democratic than it is now.
I won't attempt to criticize the bizarre mathematical calculating
system that STV uses to elect people via numerical rankings,
because as I said, I don't understand it. What I will criticize,
however, is the STV gimmick that may soon force us to elect
multiple MLAs in each riding. Apparently some ridings will
have up to seven MLAs in all, should this system be implemented.
Now I live in Coquitlam, which
is a fairly large community. Let's say my riding will have
four MLA's under STV, which seems possible. If I want to be
an informed voter, I should know the names of the candidates
running for the two major parties, the NDP and the Liberals.
Let's say I also want to be open-minded, so I try to learn
the names of all the Green party people running as well. If
there are four seats up for grabs that's already 12 candidates
to keep track of. Worst of all, parties will be able to run
multiple candidates in ridings, so my riding could easily
have six Liberals, seven NDP, and five Greens, all engaged
in some huge political battle royale. It's hard enough
just remembering where the party leaders stand on the issues,
let alone an endless parade of MLA candidates. At best, under
such a system I imagine citizens would just blindly vote for
any guy with "NDP" or "Liberal" beside
his name, with little thought being given towards the personality
of the candidate himself. When you have over a dozen people
running its hard to develop an intimate relationship with
any of them, a far cry from the claim that STV will somehow
create more "community centric" MLAs. If anything,
voting patterns will just get more mindlessly partisan out
of sheer confusion.
Our current first-past-the-post electoral system is far from
perfect. In the last election alone something like 30% of
our MLAs were elected with only a plurality of the popular
vote, meaning that many men and women are sitting in Victoria
despite the fact that most members of their ridings didn't
want them there. Though this is obviously a problem, I've
never understood why the only "solution" is to radically
change our entire electoral system with all this STV / proportional
representation nonsense. When your house has a broken window
you try to fix it, you don't buy a new house. If no candidate
can manage to win a majority of the popular vote in a riding
why not simply have a second run-off election immediately
after, in which only the "top two" candidates are
allowed to run? This system is used in many countries all
over the world- noticeably in France and many US states- and
is very simple for voters to understand. Critics will often
suggest that voting a second time is too much of a hassle,
but honestly, we vote like twice every four years. If you
consider voting one more time "fatiguing" then maybe
you shouldn't bother voting at all.
In the end however, tinkering with the electoral system is
really little more than an amusing distraction. Although it's
clear Campbell's heart was in the right place when he devised
the "citizens assembly," making the council's mandate
"electoral reform" was in retrospect a mistake.
When it comes to elements of our current political system
that trouble average voters I imagine "how the ballots
look" is pretty far down on the ol' priority scale. Far
more pressing issues to address include party discipline,
political appointments, legislative independence, and checks
and balances on the power of the premier. This first issue
appears to be a particularly intense priority. As long as
MLAs can be pistol-whipped into voting the party line every
single time or face expulsion, we'll never have meaningful
parliamentary democracy in government. The citizen's assembly
report itself even gives some lipservice to this concern,
and makes a rather unsuccessful attempt to describe the STV
electoral system as one that "weakens" party discipline.
"Because legislative caucuses will include MLAs whose
continuing electoral success will depend on representing their
local communities regardless of party politics, the pressures
of party discipline will decrease," says page 6.
Comforting words, but short on specifics. As discussed, the
STV system is so confusing it is actually likely to provoke
more party-line voting, not less. The report's repeated passing
references to voter concerns about party discipline clearly
indicate the citizen's assembly has missed its true calling.
There are only two real ways to weaken party discipline and
truly reform parliament in BC. One is to simply abolish the
antiquated practice of "confidence voting" and give
MLAs the right to freely vote however they want without the
fear of causing a "collapse" of the government hanging
over their heads. The other possible solution would be to
elect the premier independently of the legislature, so voters
can actually put some thought into electing the most competent
representative for their riding, and not simply view MLAs
as pointless middlemen whose only real purpose is to help
launch a certain party leader into the Premier's office. These
are the real issues a citizen's assembly needs to debate.
Everything else is just so much window-dressing
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