Everyone loves PR (except Canada)
JEFFREY SIMPSON
The Globe and Mail
Published Wednesday, Mar. 18 2015
The election Israel held Tuesday will eventually produce a minority government, because the country’s electoral system always does. Britain’s May 7 election will likely produce a minority government, in spite of a system that is supposed to produce majorities but recently has not.
Canada’s first-past-the-post system is looking increasingly isolated. It’s a system inherited from Britain, but even in that country, the system no longer easily fits with a fractured electorate. It also no longer fits easily in Canada, where three of the last four elections produced minority governments, as might the election scheduled for October.
Throughout Western Europe, proportional representation systems predominate. In New Zealand, first-past-the-post was replaced by a form of PR called multiple member proportional.
In Australia, the Liberals govern in a coalition with their allies in the National Party. Even if an Australian party wins a majority in the House of Representatives, it often faces a Senate controlled by other parties whose members are elected.
PR systems of any kind mean checks and balances, because parties have to negotiate with each other to form a government. This kind of negotiation can lead to stability and consensus, as in Germany with its “Grand Coalition” of Christian Democrats, Social Democrats and the Christian Social Union. Or it can lead to haggling and bargaining of an unseemly nature, which is what will likely occur in Israel in the days and weeks ahead.
In Israel, any party that receives more than 3.5 per cent of the popular vote (the threshold used to be 1 per cent, then 1 1/2 per cent, then 2 1/2 per cent) gets seats in the Knesset. The result is a kind of Mad Hatter politics with political bribes being offered by the larger parties to smaller parties for their support.
The Israeli system invites people to vote narrowly, because that way their party might bargain its way into some power. That’s one downside of PR: People think only of their ethnic or religious group or region or ideology, and not of a bigger national canvas.
It could be, therefore, that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ends up stitching together another coalition with parties representing militant settlers, ultra-Orthodox and far right-wing voters. Or he could be unable to form a government, which would be just deserts for the U.S. Republicans who tried to give his campaign a boost by inviting him to address Congress.
In contrast to many other systems, the Canadian provides very few checks and balances on a prime minister with a majority. The unelected Senate is a wet noodle; the government backbenchers are yes-men; the cabinet members are appointed by the top dog. With a couple of exceptions, none would dare stand up to such a domineering leader and his controlling staff.
It might be argued that previous prime ministers with a majority always got their way. True, but none did so in such a bruising, crushingly partisan, controlling way as the current Prime Minister. All the very worst characteristics of majority government in the first-past-the-post system have been on display daily under Stephen Harper’s Conservatives.
Across the aisle, the New Democrats and Liberals are terrified even to talk to each other about postelection scenarios that might force them to work together to form a government. This kind of discussion would be common in PR systems, but not in Canada.
Worse, because of the amateurish attempt by previous leaders of the Liberals (Stéphane Dion), New Democrats (Jack Layton) and Bloc Québécois (Gilles Duceppe) to unseat Mr. Harper after the 2008 election, any hint of pre-election discussion will be condemned by the Conservatives as anti-democratic plotting. What might be normal in other systems is considered verboten in Canada’s.
Attempts to introduce PR systems to Canada have failed in voter plebiscites in British Columbia and Ontario. Recommendations to adopt PR by commissions in New Brunswick and Quebec went nowhere.
Perhaps the supreme irony of Canada’s ineffectual dalliance with PR is that Mr. Harper himself once favoured proportional representation.
In 1996, the future prime minister and friend Tom Flanagan (they have since fallen out) penned a paper arguing that PR might allow “conservative” forces to get a share of power and therefore nudge forward their agenda.
Those were dark days for Conservatives. After enjoying a majority government since 2011, the status quo seems fine.
...This is what happened.
The Blair Government introduced the Freedom of Information Act. Parliament wanted a presumption in favour of releasing government information – that it should be released unless proved that it should not be, rather than the other way round. It gave this power of release to an Information Commissioner, and empowered an Upper Tribunal (a form of court) to adjudicate.
But Parliament also wanted a backstop. There would be some cases where the government of the day would need, in the public interest, to prevent publication. So it granted the power of what is called “executive override”. The relevant Minister could, on clear grounds, say No. This is what the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) says – Section 53(2), to be precise.
Along came The Guardian, full of righteous anger against Prince Charles for what it calls “lobbying” (others might call it concern to right neglected wrongs). It wanted to see some of his confidential letters to Ministers. The departments in question refused, supported by the Information Commissioner. The Guardian appealed. The Upper Tribunal found in its favour. The Attorney-General of the time, Dominic Grieve, thought that the Prince was entitled to write these private letters and had written them trusting that they would stay private. Mr Grieve disagreed with the Tribunal about where the balance of public interest lay. He exercised his statutory power of executive override, to prevent publication.
The Guardian got a judicial review which eventually, via the Court of Appeal, reached the Supreme Court. On 26 March, Lord Neuberger of Abbotsbury handed down the Court’s leading judgment, in favour of the Guardian. That is why we now know (though actually we knew before) what Prince Charles thinks, and why the Patagonian toothfish has achieved greater public prominence.
Lord Neuberger’s judgment was long, learned and characteristically distinguished. But what it said, in essence, is that it is outrageous for the executive to override a court, and therefore the Act which allowed this override cannot mean what it says.
Well, one is not in favour of Parliament kicking courts about, so perhaps Lord Neuberger is right. But wait a moment. Under our system, Supreme Court judges are permitted to give judgments which dissent from the majority of their fellows. I find that these minority views often contain less judicial self-congratulation and more common sense than the ones that prevail. In this case, two judges, Lord Hughes and Lord Wilson, dissented.
Lord Wilson said this: “…in reaching its decision, the Court of Appeal did not in my view interpret Section 53 of FOIA. It re-wrote it.” Lord Hughes said this: “The rule of law is of the first importance. But it is an integral part of the rule of law that courts give effect to Parliamentary intention. The rule of law is not the same as a rule that courts must always prevail.”
Both men were protesting about what might be called “judicial override”. It is a major problem of our time.
The good news is that lawyers themselves are starting to worry about it. Richard Ekins, an Oxford Professor of Law, directs the new Judicial Power Project at the think-tank, Policy Exchange. He points out that part of the rule of law itself, as traditionally understood in this country, is that the courts “were to be Parliament’s loyal servants”. This did not mean that politicians could interfere with their processes or bark orders at them. It meant that a key duty of the judges was faithfully to give effect to statutes. They were entitled to point out that a statute was poorly drafted, or seemed to contradict another statute. They were not entitled to ignore its meaning because they did not like what it meant. As Lord Hughes says, the key issue is “a matter of the plain words of the statute”.
After all, if judges were entitled to override these plain words, what would be the point of elections? In elections, voters choose who will make laws on their behalf. Out of those chosen, a government is formed. The Ministers of that government propose new laws. If Parliament agrees to them, law is what they become. If the highest court of law then says that they are not laws because they do not show sufficient deference to the greatness of judges, who is servant and who is master? The ultimate logic of this process is to stop electing MPs and start electing judges. I doubt if that is what anyone wants.
For various reasons, many of them understandable, we have lost a lot of faith in the people we elect. Many of them were shown to have spent more time working up their expenses than scrutinising legislation. Governments have become more careless about what laws say. They have more frequently curtailed debate on them, leaving the poor old Lords to do the work.
Above all, by handing over ultimate power to the EU, MPs have half opted out. They have signalled that, though they are happy to maintain their numbers and their salaries, they don’t mind surrendering their unique right to legislate. (It is an interesting sideshow in the Prince of Wales case that some of his letters cannot be protected, whatever British law may say, because some EU environmental directive, waved through by our half-asleep officials 10 years ago, removes all privacy from environmental papers. This European “executive override” of our national rights does not seem to trouble our judges one bit.)
Into this democratic vacuum have stepped the judges. Seeing a vast European space (both EU and the European Court of Human Rights) – indeed, a global adventure playground – they are turning themselves into arbiters of politics, morality, religion (usually against it) and anything else that takes their fancy. The rule of law has become the same in their minds as the rule of lawyers, and it no longer respects tiresome, old-fashioned national boundaries or elected bodies. It denies, for example, the right of our troops, when fighting wars abroad, to take what action they need to win. Not since the medieval princes of the Catholic Church has such a powerful international class had such unanswerable power over us peasants.
It requires considerable intellectual courage for politicians to confront this problem. They are cruder creatures than judges, and have less time. If they get it wrong, they could genuinely interfere with the legitimate independence of the judiciary. Now that Michael Gove has been made Justice Secretary, however, the courage and the brainpower are present.
Unless laws can once again come closer to the people for whom, supposedly, they are made, it will not only be the Prince of Wales who suffers. It will be all of us.
Cynic that I am (and I'd be GLAD to be wrong), I'm doubtful that a lot of municipalities will take this up (although Toronto looks like it might) only because of the "if it's a system that makes it less likely for me to get back in, it's crap" factor.MCG said:Preferential voting will hit Ontario in 2018.
http://www.ctvnews.ca/politics/ontario-to-introduce-ranked-ballots-starting-in-2018-1.2395387
If it is well received in municipal elections, one can hope it is only a matter of time before it gets into provincial and federal levels.
MCG said:But proportional representation is not good. It empowers parties over the voters. I would not expect preferential voting to be received the same way.
Thucydides said:Looking at the last several election at different levels, it seems we already know how to confound pollsters....
E.R. Campbell said:Essentially, and as expected, the SCC has ruled against the Government on almost every single point. The decision is here.
So: Prime Minister Harper cannot reform the Senate without reopening the Constitution and Mr Mulcair cannot, in good conscience, promise to abolish it.
What next?
In my opinion: nothing.
Prime Minister Harper will say, to people like me,, "I tried, but the Supremes say that I cannot do it, not, at least without a Constitutional imbroglio that none of us wants."
E.R. Campbell said:Gordon Gibson, long time Blue Liberal and Fraser Institute fellow (and that's about as blue as one can get), opines that there are ways - but not Justin Trudeau's way - to reform the Senate in ways that the Supremes have not closed off in this article which is reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act from the Globe and Mail:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/globe-debate/the-senate-lives-on-with-all-of-its-powers-so-now-what/article18459108/#dashboard/follows/
The Senate lives on with all of its powers. So now what?
GORDON GIBSON
Special to The Globe and Mail
Published Monday, May. 05 2014
It isn’t over until it is over and it is finally over. The idea of significant Senate reform is dead in our time courtesy of the Supreme Court reference decision. Gone. Kaput. Vanished. Forget about it.
Some diehards won’t give up. They suggest de facto abolition by prime ministers simply refusing to make appointments until the Red Chamber dies with the passing of the last senator, nothing left but the grin of the Cheshire Cat. Constitutional idiocy. When the number of senators drops below a quorum, Parliament (of which the Senate is a necessary part) stops. The wheels fall off. No more budgets, bills, no any of the fine things that our political masters contrive to better our lives.
Some propose variants whereby prime ministers appoint only an equal number from each province to arrange for the famous Triple-E Senate. Any significant evidence of this would see lawsuits by deprived provinces demanding the prime minster do his duty. Good political theatre perhaps, bad policy.
Even Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau’s no doubt well meant, but foolish scheme to depoliticize the Senate might founder upon any well defined scheme of appointment, a necessary part of his plan. This could again require provincial assent. More importantly, it would lead to a powerful Senate with no democratic connection to the elected caucuses, a horror show waiting for the curtain to rise.
Other diehards will seek significant reform schemes that the provinces and feds would support in a major consensus. Good luck with that. A child born next year might see this by the end of his or her life, but most of us will concern ourselves with more immediate matters such as the effects of climate change 50 years hence.
And yet the Senate lives on with all of its enormous powers. So now what? There are two routes only, namely “same old” in terms of appointees, or “better senators.”
The mad Emperor Caligula appointed his horse to the Roman Senate, presumably to show his contempt for that body or his regard for the equine. Canadian prime ministers have, from time to time appointed, only the rear part of the horse to our own Upper Chamber.
But surely Prime Minister Stephen Harper must stand at the pinnacle of responsibility for the addition of disgraceful names, of which we will learn more as the details of police investigations unfold. Now is an opportunity for him to be a great prime minister, if he can, to take a second look and set a new pattern. What might it look like?
First, a great prime minister might set as a personal target the naming of new senators in such a way as to gradually make that place a better mirror of Canada generally, in terms of linguistic, gender and ethnic balance. Nothing new about this trend. The Senate is already a better reflection in these terms than the House. But we have a way to go.
One dimension where the Senate should not reflect the country is in age. It is supposed to be a place of sober second thought. And wisdom, especially political wisdom, comes with age. I would put a higher age requirement – not in law but in aspiration – of 55. Retirement is at 75 and a 20-year term is long enough. One might go a step further and make senatorial pensions fully earned after 15 years, encouraging early departure by those feeling they have given what they can.
Second, a great prime minister might look at how Supreme Court judges are nominated. Judges, too, are appointed by the prime minister (in fact, if not law) but problems are few because most names on the potential lists have already been vetted by panels of the legal community in each province. (Where this is not the case, one can occasionally encounter a Marc Nadon-like embarrassment.)
Such a system should be set up for senators, with the PM undertaking that with few exceptions, appointees are to be chosen from a list advanced by local panels. These could include representation from the governing and opposition parties in the legislatures, municipalities, universities and so on. As with court nominations, these lists should be private and for the eyes of the PM only.
Finally, a revolutionary idea, give the Leader of the Opposition in the House of Commons a few appointments to make on his/her own call – every fourth one, say. The opposition in the Senate must be kept healthy as well, and opposition parties need strong members to be ready for their eventual day in office.
If Mr. Harper doesn’t like this kind of appointment reform, it sounds as though Mr. Trudeau might. This is a matter not to be overlooked at the next election.I like the general thrust and tenor of Mr Gibson's ideas, but not all the details.
First: the very best way, the only democratic way to select senators is through elections. Right now one province, Alberta, elects senators and the prime minister - any and all prime ministers - should encourage other provinces to follow suit. Prime Minister Harper should promise that he will appoint fairly elected senators, as vacancies occur, regardless of political affiliation.
Absent election, which should be run by provinces in conjunction with their own provincial general elections, it is a good idea to encourage provinces to submit, in confidence, lists of nominees to the prime minister. He should not agree to be bound by those lists - you can imagine that no PM would want to accept a list from, say, a PQ government in Quebec, but he should promise to consider it. The prime minister might, also, invite nominations from provincial organizations - the Federation of Saskatchewan Indian Nations, or the Council of Ontario Universities if he's considering appointing a distinguished, albeit Conservative leaning aboriginal leader from Saskatchewan or an educator from Ontario.
Senate must change and fast
BY DAVID AKIN, PARLIAMENTARY BUREAU CHIEF
FIRST POSTED: SATURDAY, JUNE 06, 2015
OTTAWA - Twenty of the 105 seats in the Senate chamber are empty. Among those who occupy the rest, two dozen — maybe more — are either in front of a judge on fraud charges, are being investigated for fraud, or will be questioned by the RCMP who protect us from fraud.
Which means, when you do the math, as many as half of the seats in the legislature that can block the will of Canada’s elected representatives in the House of Commons are either vacant or occupied by someone who might have been ripping us off all this time.
This isn’t funny anymore. Something’s got to change and change fast.
About this time a year ago, Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau told us if he was prime minister he would appoint senators on the recommendations of a committee of eminent Canadians.
As he explained it, picking senators this way would, first of all, not require a constitutional change and, second, take all the political grubbiness out of the whole affair.
At the time, I rolled my eyes as it sounded like Trudeau would pass this important responsibility to the same group of people who select Order of Canada recipients, the kind of folks who continue to snub Don Cherry and other popular if slightly rough-around-the-edges types.
Trudeau’s kind of committee would fill our Senate with those who read John Ralston Saul, watch foreign films with the subtitles turned off, and find vacation spots that have at least one art gallery that they can brag to their friends they visited.
Not that there’s anything wrong with that.
But there’s also nothing wrong with a few senators who don’t mind admitting to reading Fifty Shades of Grey, can name each Robertson in Duck Dynasty, and plan vacations around a World Wrestling Entertainment event.
A year after Trudeau put that idea forward, I have to confess it may be the best proposal going. It needs no legislation or constitutional amendment. It may actually do some good. Likely can’t hurt.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper rode into town in 2006 partly on the strength of the whole Triple-E senate package - elected, effective, equal - inherited from Preston Manning’s Reform days.
But Harper dithered on Senate reform and nearly a decade on his watch, we have the mess we have today in the Senate. He blew it.
Harper won’t even fill the 20 vacant seats in the Senate, judging (likely correctly) that he’d take a political hit ahead of the next election. Instead, he’ll leave it for the next guy.
That next guy, the latest polls say, could be NDP Leader Thomas Mulcair. There are no NDP senators, never have been, and if Mulcair is PM, never will be, because he’ll simply abolish the Senate. Hurrah! What a great idea! Why didn’t anyone think of that before? Blow it up! Turn the red chamber into more daycare spaces!
But Mulcair’s response to the Senate mess is an immature one from someone who wants to be his party’s first-ever PM. And it borders on irresponsible that, whenever a reporter (including this one), asks a New Democrat about appointing senators and Senate reform, we get the simplistic reply that the NDP would simply do away with it.
Canada, listen to me: We can’t just get rid of it. We’re stuck with it. Macdonald, Cartier and all our founding fathers baked the Senate into our federal parliamentary institutions in such a way that, as the Supreme Court reminded us last year, we can’t change a darn thing about it — let alone get rid of it — unless seven provinces, the House of Commons and the Senate agree to those changes. And at least half the country must live in those seven provinces.
The NDP knows this. So when you hear a New Democrat — or a candidate from any other party — at a barbecue this summer boast that they’ll “deal with the Senate” if they are the government, get them to explain to you exactly how they’d do that. And then send me an e-mail and tell me what they said.
Because I can’t get a straight answer from any of them about realistic, practical solutions to make senators more accountable to the Canadians they represent.
And to the rest of us, via the media, here's what he said this weekend ....E.R. Campbell said:Prime Minister Harper will say, to people like me,, "I tried, but the Supremes say that I cannot do it, not, at least without a Constitutional imbroglio that none of us wants."
More here and here..... “Look, obviously we find any abuse of taxpayers’ dollars by Parliamentarians … to be unacceptable,” the prime minister told reporters during a visit to Kiev where he demonstrated solidarity with Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko as the conflict with Russian-backed fighters intensifies.
Asked to comment on leaked revelations from Auditor-General Michael Ferguson’s report, Mr. Harper said the Senate is a separate entity from the Commons, where he sits, and senators are the ones that called for the watchdog to comb through their expenses.
“As you know, the Senate is an independent body and the Senate is responsible for its own expenses. The Senate itself commissioned the Auditor-Generals’ report and the Senate itself is responsible for responding to that report,” the Conservative Leader said ....
http://www.macleans.ca/politics/ottawa/trudeau-wants-alternative-to-first-past-the-post-by-next-election/Trudeau wants alternative to first past the post
A sneak peek at the Liberals’ plan to ‘restore democracy in Canada’
Joan Bryden, The Canadian Press
MacLean's
16 June 2015
OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau wants this fall’s national vote to be the last federal election conducted under the first-past-the-post electoral system.
And, if the Liberal leader becomes prime minister, it may also be the last election in which Canadians can choose not to vote, as well as the last in which the only way to vote is by marking an X on a paper ballot.
Changing the way Canadians vote is just one element of a sweeping, 32-point plan to “restore democracy in Canada” that Trudeau announced Monday.
Some of the measures have been previously announced, such as strengthening access-to-information laws; empowering backbench MPs by allowing more free votes and beefing up legislative oversight by Commons committees; and ending partisanship in the scandal-plagued Senate.
Others are new or build upon previous commitments. Among other things, Trudeau promised a Liberal government would:
— Reform question period in the House of Commons so that one day each week would be devoted solely to grilling the prime minister.
— Impose spending limits on political parties between elections, not just during election campaigns.
— Appoint an equal number of men and women to cabinet and adopt a government-wide appointment policy to ensure gender parity and greater representation of aboriginal people and other minorities.
— Create performance standards for services offered by the federal government, complete with streamlined application processes, reduced wait times and money-back guarantees.
— Create individualized, secure online accounts for Canadians who want to access all their government benefits and review key documents.
Perhaps the most ambitious promise, however, is Trudeau’s vow to do away with first-past-the-post (FPTP) in time for the next election.
The current system badly distorts voters’ choices, allowing a party to win the majority of seats in the House of Commons with less than 40 per cent of the vote, and delivering wildly different seat counts to parties that win similar shares.
Trudeau promised he’d introduce electoral reform legislation within 18 months of forming government. The legislation would be based on the recommendations of a special, all-party parliamentary committee mandated to fully and fairly study alternatives to first-past-the-post, including ranked ballots and proportional representation.
The committee would also explore the notions of mandatory voting and online voting.
The Liberal party sought grassroots reaction to the notion of legally compelling Canadians to vote, as is done in Australia, in a survey last summer. But Trudeau has not committed to take it any further until now.
The survey followed an analysis by one of Trudeau’s senior policy advisers, University of Ottawa academic Robert Asselin, who advocated mandatory voting and the introduction of preferential or ranked ballots as ways to re-engage Canadians in the political process.
Turnout in federal elections has plunged from a high of almost 80 per cent of eligible voters in 1958 to a record low of 58.8 per cent in 2008, according to Elections Canada. It rebounded slightly in 2011 to 61.1 per cent.
Under Asselin’s proposal, eligible voters would be legally required to vote but would have the option of voting for “none of the above.” Those who didn’t vote would face a small fine.
Electronic voting has also been touted as a way to entice busy Canadians to cast ballots. But Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s Conservative government last year effectively scotched Elections Canada’s plans to experiment with online voting, requiring any such tests to be approved by Parliament.
First-past-the-post has long been viewed as the primary culprit behind declining turnout, contributing to Canadians’ belief that their votes don’t count.
Trudeau personally favours replacing it with preferential balloting, in which voters rank their first, second, third and subsequent choices. If no candidate receives an absolute majority on the first ballot, the last-place candidate is eliminated and his or her supporters’ second-choice votes are counted. That continues until one candidate receives over 50 per cent.
However, Trudeau has also said he’s willing to consider proportional representation, a more complex reform for which there are a variety of possible models. Essentially, it involves electing multiple representatives for each constituency, with the seats divvied up in proportion to the share of votes won by each party in each riding.
E.R. Campbell said:There are some good ideas in there, also some suspect ones ~ but so it is with all political platforms.
I commend M Trudeau for both: having some good ideas; and enunciating some policies.
I suspect this foray into policy is driven by fear of M Mulcair's standings in the polls.
Underway said:Agreed to all your points. I'm a huge fan of mandatory voting. It's point three in my draft charter of responsibilities. Figured since rights come with responsibilities we should write them down in legislation.