| Background |
| This paper sets out to address some of the issues raised
in the Commissions consultative document Electoral
arrangements for the National Assembly for Wales: Issues
and questions for consultation. |
| Not all the consultative questions raised by the Commission
have been formally discussed here, but can be raised in
the oral session. |
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| The Hybrid Electoral System |
- The adoption of an electoral system with a proportional
element has allowed the National Assembly to become
a forum for genuine debate between all four principal
political parties whilst still retaining the essential
one member one constituency link.
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- The presence of all four main parties in the National
Assembly is especially important and any reform to
the present system should be undertaken to ensure,
as far as possible, that this range of representation
is retained. The absence of Conservative representation
from Wales in the House of Commons since 1997, despite
polling a fifth of all votes, has diminished public
debate.
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- Sharing constituencies in common with those for
Parliament has the advantage of allowing electors
to identify with a single unit as their unique political
territory.
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- If the number of Welsh Parliamentary constituencies
were to be reduced by any future Boundary Commission
(as in Scotland), several dangers present themselves.
Assuming that future Parliamentary apportionment was
to be proportionate to that for England, the number
of MPs from Wales might fall to 32. On the present
basis of parity + 50% additional members, the size
of the Assembly would be correspondingly reduced to
48. Such a reduction would further exacerbate present
concerns that the Assembly was already too small.
New legislation to retain the present Assembly constituencies,
separate from new divisions for Parliament (as
in Scotland) would mean the loss of a sense of
common political identity.
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| The Constituency Election |
- The familiarity of the first-past-the-post electoral
system and the principle of an elected member representing
all of a community, irrespective of partisanship,
are core values, embedded in the British political
tradition, that should not be prejudiced.
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- The outcome of the constituency election however,
can be grossly disproportional and any reform that
extended the scope of simple plurality voting would
further compound this problem. In the context of a
relatively small Assembly, such disproportionality
could seriously undermine public confidence. At Westminster,
such concerns are less of an issue, amongst over six
hundred MPs and where, traditionally, the two main
parties have both had areas of concentrated strength
which, in part, cancel each other out.
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| The Regional List election |
- The defined electoral regions are not natural political
communities and are therefore not areas to which electors
relate to intuitively. Although the present configuration
existed previously as Euro-constituencies, these no
longer apply and were not, in any case, natural, elector-friendly,
homogenous areas.
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- The present system gives each elector 5 AMs, one
from their constituency, four from their region. Whilst
this may give electors a greater chance of raising
issues with a Member who shares their own partisanship,
the AMs do not share a common mandate and are elected
on a different basis.
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- Uncertainty exists within the electorate as to who
is their real AM. This confusion is sometimes
compounded by the vocabulary of Members. When Nick
Bourne refers to his constituency, does he mean Mid
& West Wales or Brecon & Radnor in
this particular case, usually the latter where he
is the candidate and not the elected Member.
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- The lead candidates put forward by the political
parties on the List are not necessarily the individuals
that would be elected should the party become entitled
to additional members. The political parties (esp.
Labour) have tended to rank prominent leadership
names high on the list in an attempt to attract voter
support, whereas many of these candidates will actually
be elected in the constituency election. This ploy
deliberately misleads the electorate, for either the
party is not really in contention for an additional
member seat, or the true candidate for election is
actually placed much lower down the List.
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- Candidates use the list as an insurance against
failing to win a constituency contest. This dual candidacy
can also confuse the electorate, who may wish to consciously
reject a particular candidate only to find them elected
via the list. It should remain a basic democratic
right not to elect a particular candidate or to be
able to vote a Member out.
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- Any list candidate not fighting a constituency is
put in the invidious position whereby their own prospect
of election increases in direct proportion to their
colleagues fighting seats likelihood of failure. Thus
a Labour candidate for Mid & West Wales, for example,
would be acting against their own interests in urging
electors in Llanelli to vote Labour in the constituency
election.
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- Political parties do not share an equal commitment
to contesting the regional list election. Where a
partys strength in the constituency election
precludes additional members, they are forced into
a charade of competition (e.g. Labour in South
Wales West). Electors are being cynically encouraged
to vote for the same party in both elections, even
though their regional vote is effectively wasted.
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| Recommendations |
- Any increase in the number of Assembly Members made
by the Commission should require the extra AMs to
be elected from the List. The allocation of a greater
number of List seats would enable the final outcome
of an Assembly election to be more proportional than
currently achieved.
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- Additional member AMs should be elected from an
all-Wales list. A single, national AMS election would:
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- Negate the present danger of wasted votes
- Would give each party an equal incentive to compete
- Would allow candidates from minority parties, e.g.
the Green Party, to compete more effectively, led
by their national spokesmen rather than being forced
to find candidates for five regional elections.
- Similarly, candidates from outside of the principal
political parties, whom the original White Paper conceived
of as potential Assembly Members, such as national
figures from business, sports or the media, would
also be able to compete more effectively.
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- Electors in the List election should cast a single
vote for a party by name. The parties may wish to
publish a list of their pool of candidates before
the election, but the elector would only vote for
a party by name. After the election, the parties would
nominate their additional members, who might include
defeated constituency candidates.
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- Issues concerning the representation of social minorities,
such as women, youth, ethnic minorities and the disabled,
should be matters addressed by the political parties
in their nomination procedures.
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- Post election, alongside nominating policy spokesmen
etc. parties may wish to announce the names of AMs
assuming particular responsibilities for various parts
of Wales.
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| Conclusion |
- Perfect proportional representation should not be
the absolute goal of any reform to the electoral system.
The present hybrid approach retains the important
constituency-Member link and also facilitates the
broad representation of all the main political interests.
Any further developments should be within this model.
A reformed system need not alter these fundamentals
of the status quo, but greater transparency and openness
would engender increased public confidence and promote
more widespread democratic values.
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| Dr Denis Balsom is Chairman, Francis Balsom
Associates Ltd., Aberystwyth; Editor, The Wales
Yearbook; Honorary Research Fellow, Welsh Governance
Centre, Cardiff University; Trustee, The Institute of
Welsh Affairs and former Special Adviser to the Select
Committee on Welsh Affairs |