Has this year’s election left
the country more divided than ever?
The House of Commons is divided, sure, because of our broken electoral system.
The House of Commons is divided, sure, because of our broken electoral system.
Alberta and Saskatchewan
voters voted 68.1% Conservative, yes, but somehow they elected 98% of the MPs
from those provinces. Sounds like an old-fashioned Russian election? About
350,000 Liberal voters found their votes didn’t count.
On the other hand, Toronto,
Peel Region and Halton Region elected 40 Liberal MPs and no others. The
Liberals got only 53% of those votes, but the other 967,000 voters found their votes
didn’t count. In fact, across Canada, more voters voted Conservative than
Liberal.
The broken promise
The 2015 Liberal platform
said "We are committed to ensuring that 2015 will be the last federal election
conducted under the first-past-the-post voting system. We will convene an
all-party Parliamentary committee to review a wide variety of reforms, such as
ranked ballots, proportional representation, mandatory voting, and online
voting."
A lot of the Liberals were
serious. Some still are, like Wayne Long from New Brunswick who just said he “regrets
not being more outspoken when his party backed off its promise of electoral
reform. He has no doubt there are other Liberals who would like to revisit the
conversation.” In a House of Minorities, where the Standing Committees have no
government majority, we can certainly expect this conversation to be revisited
Imagine a House of
Commons elected by Proportional Representation
What would the results of
this year’s election be, with proportional representation? Let’s look the
result with the votes cast this year, with the Mixed Member Proportional
system: No PMO running a one-party government elected by only 39.5% of the
votes.
On the votes as
cast, the final count by province-wide proportionality (with a 4% threshold
in each province) is Liberals 116, Conservatives 118, NDP 56, Bloc 26, Greens 21.
That’s what Canadians voted for. The Constitution Act gives each province
specified numbers of MPs, so maintaining this means no
constitutional amendment is required. A detailed simulation for each region
is below.
Stéphane Dion was
right
Stéphane Dion wrote in
2012 “I do not see why we should maintain a voting system that makes
our major parties appear less national and our regions more politically opposed
than they really are. I no longer want a voting system that gives the
impression that certain parties have given up on Quebec, or on the West. On the
contrary, the whole spectrum of parties, from Greens to Conservatives, must
embrace all the regions of Canada. In each region, they must covet and be able
to obtain seats proportionate to their actual support. This is the main reason
why I recommend replacing our voting system.”
Never again
The first effect of using
proportional representation would have been to end strategic voting. Canadian
voters want more than two choices, if they can vote for what they want. A poll by Angus Reid Sept.
17 showed 77% of respondents support moving towards a system of
proportional representation.
A Stable Coalition government
Like most countries with
proportional representation, no party would have an incentive to roll the dice
and hope for an accidental majority. They would form a stable coalition government
with a four-year term. Canada has seen 11 coalition governments.
Ranked ballots in
single-member ridings are off the table
When Justin Trudeau announced the end of electoral reform in February 2017 he
said: his favourite option was “to rank your ballot. I have heard very clearly
that people think it would favour Liberals too much. And therefore I’m not
going near it, because I am not going to do something that everyone is
convinced is going to favour one party over another." He could also have
mentioned that only four percent of expert witnesses at the Electoral Reform
Committee had supported it. The Liberal MPs on the committee didn't even
mention it in their minority report, and when the media asked the Liberal
committee chair why not, he answered "nobody wants ranked ballots."
Stéphane Dion’s 2013 line
was “Preferential voting . . . does nothing to correct the distortion between
votes and seats and the under-representation of national parties compared to
regional ones.” Only proportional representation will make every vote
count.
Of citizens who showed up, 87% called for proportional representation. Did we fail? No, we succeeded. We stopped the PMO’s bait-and-switch operation. We not only stopped it, we exposed it. I not only want my vote to count, I want my neighbour’s vote to count. As the posters said in New Zealand, in the winning campaign to keep MMP, “Your vote is worth exactly the same as mine and that's a powerful thing.”
The open-list MMP
system: Every MP represents actual voters and real communities
We’re not talking about a
model with candidates appointed by central parties. We’re talking
about the mixed
member system designed by the Law Commission of Canada, where every MP
represents actual voters and real communities. Almost 60% of MPs will be
elected by local ridings as we do today, preserving the traditional link
between voter and MP. The other 40% are elected as regional MPs, topping-up the
numbers of MPs from your local region so the total is proportional to the votes
for each party.
You have two votes. One is
for your local MP. The second helps elect regional MPs, topping-up the
numbers of MPs from your local region so the total is proportional to the votes
for each party. You cast a personal vote for a candidate within the
regional list. This is commonly called “open list.” Voters elect all the
MPs. No one is guaranteed a seat. The region is small enough that the
regional MPs are accountable. Every vote counts: it’s proportional. You vote
for the regional candidate you prefer: it’s personal. There are no closed
lists. Result: after the election, everyone has a local MP, plus a few regional
MPs, likely including someone they helped elect.
Competing MPs:
You have a local MP who
will champion your community, and about five competing regional MPs, normally
including one whose views best reflect your values.
So you can vote for the
local candidate you like best regardless of party, without hurting your party,
since it's the party (regional) ballot that determines the party make-up of the
legislature. About 32% of voters split their ballots this way in New Zealand
with a similar system.
This makes it easier for
local MPs to get the support of people of all political stripes. They can earn
support for their constituency-representation credentials, not just for their
party. This boosts the kind of support MPs bring with them into the House of
Commons, thus strengthening their independence.
Did your vote count?
The 68% turnout in 2015 was
the highest in seven elections. But the last election in New Zealand, where
every vote counts, saw a 79% turnout elect a new government with three-party
support.
Regional open list MMP
To make regional MPs
accountable, we need regions small enough. The Law Commission Report was
explicitly inspired by the models of Scotland, which has 16-MSP regions, and
Wales, which has 12-MHA regions. My simulation uses regions with an average of
12 MPs (often seven local MPs, five regional MPs elected to top-up seats).
Rural and urban voters in
every region would have effective votes and fair representation in
both government and opposition. That’s a basic principle of proportional representation.
In my 2019 simulation, voters for every
major party elect someone in each of the 30 regions, except no New Democrat in
PEI. On the votes cast in 2019, Greens elect an MP in 19 of the 30. (Of course,
the Green vote would actually increase.)
How would regional MPs
serve residents?
Note: this is only a
simulation
In any election, as Prof. Dennis
Pilon says: "Now keep in mind that, when you change the voting
system, you also change the incentives that affect the kinds of decisions that voters
might make. For instance, we know that, when every vote counts, voters won't
have to worry about splitting the vote, or casting a strategic vote. Thus,
we should expect that support for different parties might change." So
I cannot promise that the husband and wife team of Elizabeth May and John
Kidder would have both been elected, or her Deputy Leader Jo-Ann Roberts, or
her Deputy Leader Daniel Green. I’m using 201 local MPs and 137 regional MPs in
30 regions, no additional MPs.
The West wants in
In Alberta (divided into 3 regions), the 14%
of the voters who voted Liberal elected not one MP. A proportional system would
have let them elect five Liberal regional MPs such as Nirmala Naidoo and Kent
Hehr from Calgary, Randy Boissonnault and Amarjeet Sohi from Edmonton,
and Amy Bronson from Lethbridge. Alberta voters would also have elected
three more NDP MPs such as Mark Cherrington from Edmonton, Shandi Bleiken from Lethbridge,
and Gurinder Singh Gill from Calgary.
In Saskatchewan, the 12% of voters who voted Liberal
deserved to elect two of its 14 MPs, yet Ralph Goodale lost his seat. A
proportional system, with eight local MPs and six regional MPs elected to
top-up seats, would have let voters in Saskatchewan elect him and another
Liberal MP like indigenous representative Tammy Cook-Searson, and three NDP MPs
like incumbent MPs Sheri Benson (NDP national Deputy Leader) and indigenous representative
Georgina Jolibois, and Claire Card from Saskatoon.
In Manitoba, Green voters would have elected
an MP like Bill Tiessen from Brandon.
In the BC Interior and
North’s nine
ridings, Liberal voters cast 20% of the votes, but elected no one. They would have
re-elected Stephen Fuhr from Kelowna, and Green voters would have elected
someone like Iain Currie from Kamloops.
In Vancouver Island’s seven ridings, Liberal voters cast 16%
of the votes, but elected no one, while NDP voters cast 32% of the ballots yet
elected five of the seven MPs. A proportional system would have let Liberal
voters on Vancouver Island elect an MP like Nikki Macdonald from Victoria,
and Conservative voters elect an MP like Byron Horner from Parksville.
In
Vancouver—Burnaby—North Shore—Maple Ridge, Green voters would have elected someone like West
Vancouver’s Dana Taylor, and under-represented Conservative voters would have
elected two more MPs like Nicholas Insley and Wai Young.
In Surrey—Richmond—Fraser
Valley—Langley NDP
voters would have elected two MPs like Surrey’s Harjit Singh Gill and
Sarjit Singh Saran, while Green voters would have elected someone like John
Kidder (Elizabeth May’s husband).
The Atlantic Provinces
would not have been almost a one-party region
In Nova Scotia, Conservative voters would not have
been limited to one MP. They would have elected two more like Scott Armstrong
from Colchester County and Cape Breton’s Alfie MacLeod. NDP voters
would, instead of being shut out, have elected two MPs like Christine
Saulnier and Emma Norton from Halifax, or Jodi McDavid from Cape Breton. Green
voters would have elected their Deputy Leader Jo-Ann Roberts.
In New Brunswick, NDP voters would have elected an MP
like Daniel Thériault in Bathurst, and Green voters would have elected a
second MP like Laura Reinsborough from.Sackville.
In Newfoundland &
Labrador Conservative
voters would have elected two MPs like Twillingate’s Alex Bracci and
Trinity’s Sharon Vokey. NDP voters would have elected a second MP like Anne
Marie Anonsen from Pouch Cove.
In PEI Conservative voters would have elected
an MP like Logan McLellan from Summerside. Green voters would have elected
an MP like Anna Keenan from Hunter River.
Ontario’s diverse voters
would have been fully represented
In Southwestern
Ontario’s 13
ridings, the 30% who voted Liberal elected only three MPs. A proportional
system would have let voters in that region elect another Liberal MP like
Sandra Pupatello or Huron-Bruce’s Allan Thompson, as well as another NDP MP
like Tracey Ramsey from suburban Windsor, and the Green Party’s Dr. Collan
Simmons of Stratford.
In West Central
Ontario’s 14
ridings, the region’s MPs are eight Conservatives and six Liberals. A
proportional system, with eight local MPs and six regional MPs, would have let
voters in that region elect two New Democrat regional MP like Cambridge’s
Dr. Scott Hamilton and Barrie’s Pekka Reinio, and two Greens like Guelph’s Steve
Dyck and Kitchener’s Mike Morrice.
In Hamilton-Niagara’s 12 ridings, Green voters would have
elected an MP like Norfolk nurse Brooke Martin, and NDP voters would have elected
a third MP like Malcolm Allen of the Town of Pelham or Hamilton’s Nick
Milanovic.
In Peel—Halton
Region’s 14
ridings, instead of all Liberal MPs, Conservative voters would have elected
four MPs like Milton’s Lisa Raitt, Stella Ambler, Terence Young and Sean Weir. NDP
voters would have elected 2 MPs like Saranjit Singh and Jordan Boswell from Brampton.
In Toronto and
East York—Etobicoke-York’s 13
ridings, rather than all Liberals, NDP voters would have elected two MPs like
Andrew Cash and Min Sook Lee or Paul Taylor, Conservative voters would have
elected two MPs like Ted Opitz and Barry O'Brien, and Green voters would have
elected an MP like Tim Grant. In North York—Scarborough’s 12
ridings, rather than all Liberals, NDP voters would have elected an MP
like Keith McCrady, while Conservative voters would have elected four MPs like Sarah
Fischer, Chani Aryeh-Bain, Daniel Lee and Sean Hu.
In York—Durham’s 15 ridings, NDP voters would have
elected two MPs like Oshawa’s Shailene Panylo and Bowmanville’s Sarah
Whalen-Wright, while Green voters would have elected an MP like East
Gwillimbury’s Jonathan Arnold.
In Central East
Ontario’s nine
ridings, NDP voters would have elected someone like Kingston’s Barrington
Walker, while Green voters would have elected an MP like Stephen Kotze from Lanark Highlands.
In the Ottawa Valley’s 10 ridings, NDP voters would have elected 2 MPs like Ottawa’s Emilie Taman and Stéphanie Mercier, while Conservative voters would have elected a third MP like Ottawa’s Pierre Lemieux.
In Northern Ontario, Green voters would have elected an MP
like Thunder Bay’s Bruce Hyer, while Conservative voters would have elected a
second MP like Sault Ste. Marie’s Sonny Spina.
Quebec’s pluralism
would be respected
In
Chaudière-Appalaches—Bas-Saint-Laurent—Gaspésie’s 8 ridings, Liberal voters would have
re-elected Matane’s Rémi Massé rather than see him defeated. NDP voters would
have re-elected Guy Caron from Rimouski.
In Quebec
City—Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean—Côte-Nord’s 11 ridings, NDP voters would have re-elected Karine
Trudel from Jonquière. Liberal voters would have re-elected Richard
Hébert from Lac-Saint-Jean.
In Estrie—Mauricie—Centre-du-Québec’s 10 ridings, Conservative voters would
have elected a second MP like Yves Lévesque in Trois-Rivières. NDP voters
would have re-elected Ruth Ellen Brosseau or Sherbrooke’s Pierre-Luc Dusseault.
In Laurentides—Lanaudière—Outaouais—Abitibi-Témiscamingue—Nord’s 15 ridings, Liberal voters would have
re-elected Linda Lapointe from Rivière-des-Mille-Îles. NDP voters would have
elected an MP like Nicolas Thibodeau in Gatineau. Conservative voters would
have elected an MP like Pontiac’s Dave Blackburn. Green voters would have
elected an MP like Josée Poirier Defoy from Luskville.
In Montérégie’s 12 ridings, NDP voters would have re-elected
Brigitte Sansoucy from Saint-Hyacinthe. Conservative voters would have elected
an MP like Bernard Barré, also from Saint-Hyacinthe. Green voters would have
elected floor-crosser Pierre Nantel in Longueuil.
In Montreal East—Laval’s 12 ridings, Conservative voters would
have elected an MP like Tom Pentefountas. NDP voters would have elected a
second MP like Nimâ Machouf. Green voters would have elected an MP like Juan
Vazquez, spokesperson on Biodiversity who stood against Justin Trudeau. Bloc
voters, over-represented outside Montreal but under-represented inside, would
have elected two more like Simon Marchand and Lizabel Nitoi.
In Montreal-West’s 10 ridings, rather than all Liberals, NDP
voters would have elected an MP like Andrea Clarke, Conservative voters would
have elected an MP like David Tordjman, Green voters would have elected Deputy
Leader Daniel Green, and Bloc voters would have elected an MP like Isabel Dion.
Big-city rule? Or “Small
and Rural”?
Some people fear
proportional representation would mean big-city rule. Not so: In this year’s tax
return, the rebate for carbon taxes includes a 10% supplement for residents of
“small and rural communities:” those who live outside a Census Metropolitan
Area, and presumably have to use more gasoline. Using that as a definition, 28
of the above examples of regional MPs come from small and rural communities.
Democratic nominations
Today, parties can nominate
as they choose. Canada has no law to stop parties from appointing local
candidates. Fair Vote Canada says they should have to nominate
candidates democratically in order to qualify for campaign expense subsidy.
I expect parties would nominate local candidates first. As soon as they are finished, they hold the regional nomination process. I expect it’s an every-member online vote, after candidates’ speeches, carried online. In the run-up to the regional nomination, likely a party would hold all-candidates meetings in each riding. I expect almost all the local candidates would also stand for the positions of regional candidate, unless one of them was a token local candidate who had no interest in trying to compete across the region.
I expect parties would nominate local candidates first. As soon as they are finished, they hold the regional nomination process. I expect it’s an every-member online vote, after candidates’ speeches, carried online. In the run-up to the regional nomination, likely a party would hold all-candidates meetings in each riding. I expect almost all the local candidates would also stand for the positions of regional candidate, unless one of them was a token local candidate who had no interest in trying to compete across the region.
On election day, voters can
move a regional candidate up the regional list if he or she gets enough
personal votes. Voters can elect that candidate ahead of another candidate whom
the party’s regional nomination process had ranked higher. But still, it’s an
advantage to be ranked first. So, the regional nomination process has to rank
them, even if the eight regional candidates are acclaimed.
I expect some regional-only candidates would also be nominated, to add diversity to the ballot. Since voters can vote for the regional candidate they prefer, one of the regional-only candidates could be elected. This could be quite likely if the strongest local candidate wins a local seat, dropping off the regional count, opening the door for someone new.
I expect some regional-only candidates would also be nominated, to add diversity to the ballot. Since voters can vote for the regional candidate they prefer, one of the regional-only candidates could be elected. This could be quite likely if the strongest local candidate wins a local seat, dropping off the regional count, opening the door for someone new.
Overhangs
With a regional MMP model,
we risk local sweeps being so extreme that they create “overhangs.” Those are
results too disproportional for the compensatory (“top-up”) MPs to correct,
when they are only 40% of the total. That’s the trade-off in the system design,
to keep local ridings from being almost double their present size.
An overhang happens in my
simulation with the Liberal sweep of Toronto, which results in a bonus of one
MP for the Liberals at the cost of the NDP, and the Liberal sweep of Peel—Halton,
a bonus of one from the Greens. However, the NDP near-sweep of Vancouver Island
gives them a bonus of one MP from the Conservatives. Also, the Bloc sweep of Laurentides—Lanaudière
gives them a bonus of one MP at the cost of the Conservatives. With a real MMP
election where voters have more choice and do not need to cast negative votes,
such sweeps will not normally happen. Random regional rounding differences also
make slight changes.
Perfect province-wide
proportionality would have resulted in Liberals 116, Conservatives 118, NDP 56,
Bloc 26, Greens 21. My simulation happens to show Liberals 120, Conservatives 115,
NDP 54, Bloc 26, Green 22, a bonus of four Liberals and one Green, three from
the Conservatives, two from the NDP.
Provincial recap:
Ontario:
FPTP:
Liberals 79, Conservatives 36, NDP 6
PR:
Liberals 54, Conservatives 39, NDP 20, Greens 8
Quebec:
FPTP
Liberals 35, BQ 32, Conservatives 10, NDP 1
PR:
Liberals 28, BQ 26, Conservatives 12, NDP 8, Greens 4
BC:
FPTP:
Liberals 11, Conservatives 17, NDP 11, Greens 2, Jody W-R 1
PR:
Liberals 10, Conservatives 15, NDP 10, Green 5, Jody W-R 1
Alberta:
FPTP:
Liberals 0, Conservatives 33, NDP 1
PR:
Liberals 5, Conservatives 25, NDP 4, Green 0
Saskatchewan:
FPTP:
Liberals 0, Conservatives 14, NDP 0
PR:
Liberals 2, Conservatives 9, NDP 3, Green 0
Manitoba:
FPTP:
Liberals 4, Conservatives 7, NDP 3
PR:
Liberals 4, Conservatives 6, NDP 3, Green 1
Nova
Scotia:
FPTP:
Liberals 10, Conservatives 1, NDP 0
PR:
Liberals 5, Conservatives 3, NDP 2, Green 1
New Brunswick:
FPTP: Liberals 6,
Conservatives 3, Green 1, NDP 0
PR: Liberals 4, Conservatives
3, Green 2, NDP 1
Newfoundland &
Labrador:
FPTP: Liberals 6,
Conservatives 0, NDP 1
PR: Liberals 3, Conservatives
2, NDP 2
Prince Edward Island:
FPTP: Liberals 4,
Conservatives 0, Green 0, NDP 0
PR: Liberals 2, Conservatives
1, Green 1.
Technical Notes:
The calculation for any PR
system has to choose a rounding method, to round fractions up and down. I have
used the “largest remainder” calculation, which Germany used until recently,
because it is the simplest and most transparent. In a 10-MPP region, if Party A
deserves 3.2 MPPs, Party B deserves 3.1, Party C deserves 2.3, and Party D
deserves 1.4, which party gets the tenth seat? Party D has a remainder of 0.4,
the largest remainder. In a region where one party wins a bonus (“overhang”), I
allocate the remaining seats among the remaining parties by the same
calculation.
The purpose of the
compensatory regional seats is to correct disproportional local results, not to
provide a parallel system of getting elected. The Law Commission recommended
that the right to nominate candidates for regional top-up seats should be
limited to those parties which have candidates standing for election in at
least one-third of the ridings within the top-up region. Jenkins recommended
50%. This prevents a possible distortion of the system by parties pretending to
split into twin decoy parties for the regional seats, the trick which
Berlusconi invented to sabotage Italy’s voting system.
For the three Territories, I would actually prefer to give them each a second
MP, but for simplicity, in this simulation I left them unchanged.
3 comments:
I'd love to tweet this blog post out as a long tweet chain...
May I please?
Thanks. Regional commentary very useful. First time I've heard of "overhang."
Thanks, Wilf, for this very detailed, region-by-region analysis.
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