1 / 18

Electoral Systems

Electoral Systems. Ensuring Representation, Ensuring Stability February 4 th , 2003. Electoral Systems. are never neutral help ensure certain outcomes and make other outcomes less likely the question – which type of outcome do different electoral systems favour??.

jaracely
Download Presentation

Electoral Systems

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Electoral Systems Ensuring Representation, Ensuring Stability February 4th, 2003

  2. Electoral Systems • are never neutral • help ensure certain outcomes and make other outcomes less likely • the question – which type of outcome do different electoral systems favour??

  3. Canadian National Election Results, 2000

  4. 1998 Quebec Provincial Election

  5. Single Member Plurality System (SMPS) • one representative per geographic area (riding, constituency, district) • ‘first-past-the-post’, ‘winner-take-all’ system • win a seat by having more votes than the next candidate • i.e. do not need a majority (50%+1) • to win overall election, party does NOT have to win the most votes

  6. Canadian National Election Results, 1979

  7. Effects of SMPS • tends to over-represent strongest party (more seats than votes warrant) • helps ensure majority government • decisive leadership • accountability • stability (governments do not fall often) • distorts patterns of representation

  8. Distortion under SMPS • example: Canada • exacerbates regional differences in party support • favours parties with concentrated regional support • i.e. encourages regional parties • discourages minor national parties (e.g. with diffuse support) • exacerbates regionalized images of parties • creates impression that parties have little regional support

  9. % of Party Seats in Each Region, 2000

  10. Alternative Systems: Proportional Representation • representation (# of seats) directly proportional to share of popular vote received (# of votes) • mechanics: • party lists • single transferable vote

  11. PR – cont’d • advantages: • every vote counts • voters have greater choice • minorities and variety of interests better represented • disadvantages: • may produce unstable governments • encourages ideological polarity • splintering of party system • majority government unlikely • centralizes control with parties

  12. Hypothetical Results Under Different Electoral Systems - 2000 Election

  13. Alternative Systems: Proportional Representation • Western Europe • 21 of 28 countries using proportional representation • Austria, Belgium, Cyprus, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, and Switzerland

  14. Other Alternative Systems – The Hybrid Model • German ‘Hybrid’Model • mixed member proportional system • 2 votes: candidate, party list • 5% rule • Germany, Bolivia, Venezuela, New Zealand, Hungary, parliaments of Scotland and Wales

  15. Electoral Systems & Democracy • SMPS: • emphasizes accountability and stability • exaggerates majority rule • concern with rights of minorities • concern with representation • proportional representation • more competition, choice, political equality • better representation • costs? • accountability • stability • bold leadership

  16. Electoral Systems & Power • which party does the SMPS system benefit most? • the winning party • which party would PR disadvantage most relative to current system • the winning party • what are the characteristics of the SMPS system • helps ensure that winning party has majority control over parliament • who’s consent is required to undertake shift to PR? • parliament (controlled by winning party) • Is change likely to take place??

More Related