Does Canada’s Electoral System Under-Represent Minorities?

It is erroneously believed by some that the original U.S. constitution had a clause decreeing that a black man was "worth" only 60% of a white man.  The three-fifths compromise, rather, was a mechanism for determining how slaves (not blacks, though in the 1770s only 8% of the black population were 'free', so there was little difference) should be counted in determining how many representatives each state received in the House.

Canada's electoral system, however, does inadvertently make the votes from voters of some races worth less than others.


Using data from Pundits Guide, I considered 3 groups that have the long-form census monikers of 'Black', 'Chinese' and 'West Asian'.  As a crude measure, I looked for ridings where one of the groups made up a significant portion of the population.

  • There are 13 ridings where 10% of the population is "Black"
  • There are 13 ridings where 20% of the population is "Chinese"
  • There are 13 ridings where 20% of the population is "West Asian"

The 13 figure was a coincidence, but a happy one.  For each group, I examined the average population, measured in 2006, of the 13 ridings vs. the population of the 295 ridings that did not meet the cut-off.  Here are the results.

"Black" Ridings

  • Avg. Population of a "Black" Ridings: 119,772
  • Avg. Population of a "Non-Black" Ridings: 101,884
  • Value of a Vote in a "Black" Riding vs. a "Non-Black" Riding: 90%

"Chinese" Ridings

  • Avg. Population of a "Chinese" Riding: 123,320
  • Avg. Population of a "Non-Chinese" Riding: 101,728
  • Value of a Vote in a "Chinese" Riding vs. a "Non-Chinese" Riding: 82%

"West Asian" Ridings

  • Avg. Population of a "West Asian" Riding: 127,521
  • Avg. Population of a "Non-West Asian" Riding: 101,543
  • Value of a Vote in a "West Asian" Riding vs. a "Non-West Asian" Riding: 80%

These are admittedly crude measures – a more accurate measure of the worth of a "Black Vote" rather than "The Vote of Someone Living in a Black Riding" may yield slightly different results.  I believe these figures understate the problem, as the population measures are from 2006, and it is safe to say the population of these ridings is growing faster than the Canadian average.

Measures by the Conservatives to add more seats to B.C., Alberta and Ontario would reduce but not eliminate the disparity, as some provinces will still be over-represented in Parliament (none of the ridings for the 3 groups are in PEI), and rural ridings are made to have smaller populations than urban ones (all the ridings for our 3 groups are urban).  As well, there is talk of giving Quebec more seats; none of the "West Asian" or "Chinese" ridings are in Quebec, though some "Black" ridings are.

Updated to Add

I figured out how to navigate Pundits Guide a bit better, so I was able to collect more data to make a more robust determination.

I wanted to determine how many MPs different groups were electing, versus how many they actually were.  If a riding was 1/8th "Chinese", they can be thought of as electing 1/8th of an MP.  Visually think of it as if each ethnic group were it's own province.  How many ridings does that province get now, and how many does it get by rep-by-pop.  Not surprisingly, the results are quite similar to above.

Rep ratios

I'll add other census groups in the next couple of days.

My question to you is: Given the other tensions the electoral system needs to consider, how much under-representation is acceptable? Is it acceptable for the vote from a "West Asian" be worth 95% of an average Canadian? 90%? 80%? 70%?  Where is the cut-off?

96 comments

  1. Marion's avatar

    For a summary table of population and electors per riding (as well as voter turn out in the last election), see Table 11 on this page:
    http://elections.ca/scripts/resval/ovr_41ge.asp?prov=&lang=e
    I’ll let you guys play with the data.

  2. Bob Smith's avatar
    Bob Smith · · Reply

    “Personally, it doesn’t worry me. But I would further add that the decisive and well-known benefits of urban habitation for minorities vastly outweigh the murky and very speculative “harm” some might infer from electoral under-representation.”
    I’d also add that one can be over/under represented in the house of commons without it materially affecting your effective representation in Ottawa. I mean, let’s face it, PEI is badly over-represented in the house (and the Senate), but I don’t think anyone is under the illusion that the PMO is taking its marching orders from voters in PEI. That doesn’t mean that we shouldn’t generally try to keep riding sizes from getting too out of whack, if for no other reason that maitaining the perception of fairness and the legitimacy of the house of commons, as well as ensuring that ridings are too big for their MPs to handle. Those are legitimate issues, but they aren’t directly related to a riding’s political “power”.

  3. Determinant's avatar
    Determinant · · Reply

    On the subject of Black ridings, Canada’s black community is really two communities. The one we think of are immigrants from the Caribbean and to a lesser extent Africa since the 1960’s. The older community are the descendants of escaped slaves. The largest community of this kind is in Nova Scotia actually. There the Black community originated in escaped slaves who ere promised freedom by the British during the American Revolution in return for fighting for the Crown. After 1783 they were settled in Nova Scotia in places like Cole Harbour.
    There is a smaller American slave refugee community in Ontario near Buxton around Chatham.
    As a point of interest the TTC’s corporate colours are those of the first Toronto cab company which was run by Thornton Blackburn, a former slave from Kentucky. His escape from jail in Detroit caused the first race riot there. An extradition back to Michigan was refused by Sir John Colborne, the Lieutenant-Governor who noted that a man cannot steal himself and this set a precedent in extradition law. A biography about him and his wife was the first slave biography published since the American Civil War.

  4. Andrew's avatar

    Mike;
    Where is your condemnation of the US Senate as being one of the most racist institutiona on Earth – favouring Pacific Islanders through Hawaii over the Hispanic population of large states like California?
    Can’t we replace ‘racism’ with ‘the House gives some weight to provincial lines and geography, further immigrants may have a preference to migrate to cities where they enjoy network benefits’?

  5. Unknown's avatar

    @Frances in what way does PR negatively affect who runs?
    FPTP people who run are people who are popular with the voters, i.e. good looking, charismatic, etc.
    Any kind of system where candidates are chosen from party lists tends to favour people who are popular within the party. So, say, someone like [noted Canadian economist/policy analyst] Judith Maxwell who’s an extraordinary networker, hard working plus a really nice person would do well in a system where candidates are chosen from party lists, but wouldn’t do well in FPTP.
    I don’t know if the effects of PR are negative – PR tends to lead to higher levels of female representation, for example, because women get on party lists more often than they win FPTP contests.

  6. Unknown's avatar

    Mike, I misinterpreted your “one member one vote” comment. I do agree with the general principle of equal numbers of voters across constituencies.

  7. Mike Moffatt's avatar
    Mike Moffatt · · Reply

    Andrew: Seriously?The next time I criticize a Canadian tax policy, are you going to exclaim, ‘what about the United States?!?’
    Given the title of the blog, I think it should be clear why I’m looking at Canada.

  8. Jim Rootham's avatar
    Jim Rootham · · Reply

    @Frances
    The problems of PR pale in comparison to the problems of FPTP. Given the combination of voter suppression (no enumeration, denigration of the state, attack ads, voter ID requirements) and swing riding focusing you get 15% of the population installing a government that does dumb things like the cancellation of the long form census.
    Open lists would mitigate against the alleged problem of electing people from lists not popular with the voters.

  9. Determinant's avatar
    Determinant · · Reply

    Jim I take offence at your suggestion that voter ID requirements and registration are a form of vote suppression. I have worked as a Poll Clerk and Deputy Returning Officer in two federal elections.
    Enumeration is carried out by Income Tax returns. You remember that little box that puts you on the National Register of Electors?
    Canada allows same-day registration. I have done that personally for many people. If you don’t have two pieces of ID you can be sworn in with a friend attesting to your identity. I have seen many people with incomplete voter information on voter’s lists. Rural Addresses are a pain. Rural Route, Civic Address lot number or Street Number if 911 has been implemented. Pick one. When that happens you correct the information, it’s no reason to deny someone the vote.
    Vote Suppression? Canada bends over backwards to let people vote. I’ve administered the system.

  10. Bob Smith's avatar
    Bob Smith · · Reply

    “I don’t know if the effects of PR are negative – PR tends to lead to higher levels of female representation, for example, because women get on party lists more often than they win FPTP contests.”
    A couple of points. First, in a number of PR coutries, the greater percentage of female represenatives in parliament (or whatever) is often more a function of either defacto or dejure quotas rather than PR, per se. So, for example, in Sweden (and 3 other nordic countries) the high level of female representation in parliament is a function of party level (though voluntary) quotas. Similarly, when advocates of PR state that Canada ranks behind countries like Afghanistan, Iraq and Pakistan in the representation of woman, they ignore the point that in those country’s woman’s representation is parliament is a function of a contstitutional quota, not the magic of PR (indeed, the constitutional quota is neccesary because, absent it, a PR system would probably produce a male dominated, if not exclusively male, parliament).
    Of course, it would be possible (albeit more difficult) to impose similar quota systems in a FPTP system, though I suspect that politically that would be a non-starter. In that respect the difference between a PR system and a FPTP system is that hte former makes quotas more politically palateable since no one has “their” representative, quotes don’t cause voters to feel that their choice is denied.
    The second point is that the link between electing woman and woman’s representation in parliament is arguably a tenous one. Iraq, Afghanistan or Pakistan may have more woman in their respective legislatures than Canada, the US or the UK, but I’m pretty sure I know which countries I’d chose to live in if I were a woman.
    Indeed, the 1994 US elections highlighted the crucial distinction between, for lack of a better phrase, “superficial” representation and “effective” representation. That election was significant for two reasons. First, it was the first time there was a particularly large number of gerrymandered districts formed along racial ridings, which ensured that the new congress would contain a record number of African American congressman, which it did. Second, the republicans won the house for the first time in 40 years. And the link between those two facts was that the gerrymandered “African American” districts ensured that the Democrats (and African Americans) won those ridings with hefty majorties, while the republicans won the 4 or 5 surrounding (and noticeably paler) districts which had been denuded of a large chunk of loyal democrats. The result was that African Americans were, superficially, better represented in the house, but effectively, were far worse represented than they had been.

  11. Bob Smith's avatar
    Bob Smith · · Reply

    Jim,
    I’m always struck by the sense that PR is a solution in search of a problem. In my view, the FPTP countries are not obviously less well governed than the PR countries. That’s surely the litmus test of a any electoral system – does it produce “peace, order, and good government”? I mean, geeze, at a 144 years and counting, Canada has done alright for itself (certainly, it has survive longer than more than a handful of PR regimes which crashed and burned – Germany comes to mind, as does 3rd and 4th republic France). That puts a hefty onus on those advocating for a change to our electoral system.
    Sure, one can point out absurdities in the FPTP system. One can equally point out absurdities in the PR system (“we’re doing what because of a promise made to which party”?). The list of PR countries includes just as many parliamentary basket cases as the list of FPTP countries. It’s fair to say, as you do, that Israel’s PR system is a mess because Israel is Israel, but just as Canada isn’t Israel, it also isn’t New Zealand. Perhaps its my inate conservatism, but if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.

  12. Jim Sentance's avatar
    Jim Sentance · · Reply

    As probably the only PEI resident who comments on this board, I feel I should say something, and that would be to echo what Determinant said, that this is not primarily a racial thing, only secondarily a rural/urban thing, and primarily the result of the fact that Canada is a federation. Federations by their very nature imply or require a compromise between the principle of rep by pop and representation of regional interests. Unlike most federations our half assed adaptation of the Westminster model has meant that the Senate, which is nominally the house of representation for the regions or provinces, is impotent enough that we have had to compromise the rep by pop principle in the Commons to ensure them some degree of power. If we had a Senate of the structure and power the US Senate has (which would see PEI represented equally with Ontario, as Rhode Island is with California) I’d gladly give up our extra seats in the House of Commons. It’s unfortunate that our newer immigrants tend to concentrate in provinces where regional considerations mean fewer seats per voter, but I don’t think its in any way the motivation for that outcome.

  13. Determinant's avatar
    Determinant · · Reply

    Jim Sentance:
    But we’ve never had equal representation for provinces in the Senate. Ever. Further as I said in Westminster systems the upper house’s veto is a ticking time bomb. Britain dealt with it by abolishing the veto entirely. Australia has a joint sitting procedure available if the House and Senate disagree though it didn’t work in 1975.
    I rather think our constitutional debates take too little notice of Australia.

  14. Jim Rootham's avatar
    Jim Rootham · · Reply

    Well, electoral systems are a large can of worms that won’t be settled in the comments to an ecomomics blog. But here goes anyway.
    @Determinant In Canada the ID and lack of enumeration are minor parts of voter suppression, mostly for marginalized populations that don’t need much suppression anyway. To be clear, the people who run the system are not part of that problem.
    @Bob Smith
    Are you really suggesting that Germany would have been better off with a Nazi majority in the Reichstag? It wasn’t PR that caused that problem.
    From my point of view the evidence since then is pretty clear that PR produces better governments. The Scandinavian countries are the current poster children for good social results. PR has been critical to that success. The Thatcher/Reagan wave washed up on their shore but the right wing governments elected were not able to trash the system because they couldn’t get enough people to go along with it.
    If you want to be explicit in supporting the status quo with a bias towards the upper echelons in society then FPTP is the way to go. But if you think everybody’s vote should have the same power then PR is the only game in town.

  15. Determinant's avatar
    Determinant · · Reply

    Jim, that is wrong. It is not vote suppression. I have bent over backwards to let people vote, explain what I need from them and administer legal oaths to make it work.
    Here are the ID requirements: http://www.elections.ca/content.aspx?section=vot&dir=ids&document=index&lang=e
    You need to prove your identity and address. At minimum that means a friend who knows you and lives in your riding and a piece of mail with your name and address on it. Utility bills are great.
    It is legally possible to register a homeless person to vote and in fact this is done. You need a person who knows where they habitually sleep to vouch for them.
    Lack of enumeration is also not vote suppression. Same-day registration at the poll is legal, regular and frequently used in Canada.
    If you walk in to a poll with a utility bill or some sort of official mail and friend you vouch for you, you will be registered in five minutes and have your ballot in hand in six. Elections Canada even hires dedicated Registration Officers in polls known to have frequent Voter’s List amendments. Their sole job is to register people who walk into polls on the spot.
    This is not the United States. We have clear, concise and easy rules to follow. We have poll staff who bend over backwards to make those rules work. Elections Canada’s training manuals are exemplary. Under the Charter of Rights & Freedoms Canadians have an express right to vote; the law and the poll staff make that happen.
    The system we use really is that good. When counting ballots everything is double-entered and counter-checked. The reason vote fraud is so rare in Canada is that the system is entirely geared to eliminating it. If something is amiss a DRO will know about it shortly and it will be documented in the Poll Book.
    Getting people to actually have the will to go the polls is the job of politicians.

  16. Jim Rootham's avatar
    Jim Rootham · · Reply

    If the system is that good why did they recently tighten the rules?

  17. DavidN's avatar

    Can’t help but feel all this talk about PR v FPTP, and voter suppression is a bit self-indulgent. Democracy ‘works’ in countries like Canada. Changing some institutional characteristics may ‘improve’ things but the low hanging fruit was picked long ago. It’s clear from examples in the third world the ‘form’ of democracy isn’t going to matter a fig if the norm or ‘culture’ to resolve differing interests through the ballot box (rather than via AK-47) exists. The really interesting question is why does Canada have this democratic ’norm’ equilibrium and some other countries don’t.

  18. Sina Motamedi's avatar
    Sina Motamedi · · Reply

    I honestly never woulda thought that there would be so much objection to the simple democratic principle of one person, one vote.
    Seat distribution is not supposed to be a political issue. Representation by population is supposed to be a democratic axiom.
    Advocating that Quebec, or whoever, should receive more seats because of whatever political, cultural, language, equal partner status or other reason you can think of while other provinces with growing urban centres are grossly under-represented is just ludicrous and deserves to be called out as so.
    It doesn’t matter if the constituents in under-represented ridings are visible minorities or not. Call these under-represented voters Type A. The current distribution is a huge social injustice to Type A’s.
    The fact that Type A’s happen to be biased to visible minorities adds to the institutionalization of racism, whether it is intentional or not. And it deserves to be denounced as such and not trivialized.

  19. finance's avatar

    The same argument could be made between Urban and non-urban riding. Facts remain that most ethinic minorities live in cities, and urban ridings have larger population.

  20. SimonC's avatar

    Suggestions for future blog posts:
    “Does Canada’s Electoral System Under-Represent people who bike to work?”
    “Does Canada’s Electoral System Under-Represent investment bankers?”
    “Does Canada’s Electoral System Under-Represent people who live in apartments?”
    :o)

  21. Mike Moffatt's avatar
    Mike Moffatt · · Reply

    Ha! Thanks for bringing levity into this thread, Simon.

  22. Jim Rootham's avatar
    Jim Rootham · · Reply

    Given that the mill rate on apartments in Toronto is 3 times the rate on owner occupied dwellings, the last one might be a very useful analysis.
    @DavidN I think “better than Zimbabwe” is a low standard for political effectiveness. We can do better. One way of doing better is PR.

  23. Determinant's avatar
    Determinant · · Reply

    Jim:
    Because our voting system is run by auditors who want everything provable and documented. The gold standard never changed: Driver’s Licence. The list of available secondary ID was tightened. We need to be able to relate a face to a name and a name to an address. Under previous rules the face to a name part was weak.
    Plus vouching has always been there. Nobody knows about it except elections staff but it works.
    Further every province has rolled out a Provincial ID card. It is a driver’s license without the permit to drive. I dearly wished Ontario had them in time for the last federal election but we are offering them now. That is the only card you need to vote and for practical purposes of dealing with any government institution every adult should have one.
    The absolute best thing any political party could do for its “Get out the Vote” drive is to make sure that it’s members and supporters have a valid Driver’s Licence or Provincial ID card in time for election day. Hand it in and you’ll have your ballot in two minutes and be out in five.

  24. Bob Smith's avatar

    “Are you really suggesting that Germany would have been better off with a Nazi majority in the Reichstag? It wasn’t PR that caused that problem.”
    No, what I am suggesting is that PR tends to allow (and encourage) the development of extremist political parties of all sorts (and the prevelance of extremists political parties of all stripes in the parliaments, and even in the governing coalitions, of PR countries is well documented). In FPTP systems, political extremism (and I’m talking real political extremist, not the faux extremism of the “Stephen Harper is a facist”/”Jack Layton is a communist” crowds) is fatal to electoral success – extremist parties just can’t get their foot in the door.
    And while it’s fine to say, that PR is better because the Scandianavian countries are better governed (a debatable proposition, certainly if your criteria is that they’re nice social democracies, and even if true, query to what extent that is a function of electoral system rather than underlying social factors), that’s no more compelling than the suggestion that PR is worse than the FPTP system because Israel, Greece, Italy and Spain are basketcases. It’s easy to cherry pick successful/unsuccessful examples of different political systems. But take a look throught a list of contries by electoral system and it’s hard to say that one list is unambiguously better governed than the other.
    Moreover, I’m unimpressed by “everyone’s vote should have the same power” argument. That strikes me a fetish of the “fair vote” types, and not a meaningful one. Whether it’s a PR or FPTP system the reality is that every individual vote has the exact same “power”, i.e., none in all but the marginal case (winning a riding by 1 vote in a FPTP, or causing a party to be allocated 1 more seat in a PR system). Similarly, the claim that FPTP system somehow benefits powerful elites is an amusing, if unfounded, claim (I suppose, in Canada, we can accept that the powerful elites live primarily in northern Canada and the maritimes?). Indeed, one of the criticism of PR systems (which even defenders of PR will acknowlege) is that many of them are in fact quite vulnerable to manipulation by powerful or sectarian interests(certainly that is the case in pure list systems).
    In any event, unless advocates of PR can provide any compelling evidence that Canada would be better governed under some variety of a PR system, I don’t see their propoals getting any traction with Canadians

  25. Jim Rootham's avatar
    Jim Rootham · · Reply

    A government getting a majority after being found in contempt of parliament strikes me as pretty compelling evidence for a change.
    Spain is not a political basket case, it’s problems are pretty much entirely the result of using the Euro.
    FPTP does not amplify the power of elites by over representing the northern ridings, it does it by making elections easier to manipulate by creating knife edge conditions for majorities. Do you really want to claim that Canada is a vastly different place because of the change in results of the last 2 elections?

  26. Unknown's avatar

    SimonC “”Does Canada’s Electoral System Under-Represent people who bike to work?”

    Yes, brilliant suggestion!
    I feel an overwhelming sense of grievance building up already…

  27. DavidN's avatar

    Jim: You’re asking the wrong question. The question you should be asking is how many countries have a political system up to the standard of Canada?

  28. DavidN's avatar

    Forgot to add. Jim have you got any reference to literature that says PR will produce better policies over FPTP?

  29. btg's avatar

    Can I suggest a different methodology…
    get a table for all 308 ridings showing the ethnic/raicual breakdown for each riding.
    then in each riding, apportion that vote by the percent of that group in each riding – so if there are 10% black people in a riding, they get 10% of that commons seat.
    add up all the numbers for each racial group across all ridings, then divide the total by 308 to get their effective representation in parliament – and comparte this against their percent of the national population.

  30. Unknown's avatar

    FPTP and RP shift the fringe players in different places and it may have consequences.
    RP is much smoother in capturing shifts in public opinion. It is easier to move from one cooalition partner to the next. There are less border effects.
    Parties are big tents and are good machines for confusing the voters. Do the good communitarians in the Maritimes really understand that their moderate tory heart has been hijacked by people who despise them and their value?
    Currently, the Harper gov’t (there is no longer a Canadian one, I can’t wait for the statue of the Dear Leader in the town square) has “a strong mandate” from less than 40% of the electorate and unlike Chrétien’s 40% is on the fringe of the population values. It is in place thanks to 6200 votes in 14 ridings.
    Determinant: happy to learn Colborne had something human in him. I know him as the “vieux brûlot” ( the old kindling) who shot, burn villages, burned alive people in the burning villages and hanged as much as he could get away with in 1837-1839.
    http://www.votepair.ca/canada-2011/looking-back-and-ahead-final-report-on-2011-federal-election/
    Under RP ( presuming the votes would be the same) Harper would be the thrice rejected leader of a minority party,not the absolute dictator of a country where parliamentary rule is extinguished. (Bills presented in public asssembly instead of the House..). Under PR, the moderate Maritimes and Toronto Tories would be in a coalition with the Liberals and NDP with the tacit support of the Bloc.
    Sina Motamedi: Sorry: the distribution of seats and voices in governing a polity is not arithmetics. It is politics. There is some compact where you apportion between the constituents. You can’t let minority be drowned nor dominate. Upper Canada was perfectly comfortable in the two Canada having the same number of seats. Till they discovered they now were the majority and that RepbyPop was the ultimate in democracy. The smaller groups need guaranties the majority will not trample them. They need guarantees that newcomers will respect the original pact.
    My college offer services in French,English and Innu, the thre group that had been here for the last 5 centuries. We do not offer anything in Italian or Portuguese. They must respect the original pact into which they bought williingly. Unless someone wants to behave like tha Americans in Mexico and Hawaï.
    Bob Smith: as pointed by Jim Rootham, Spain was not a basket case…
    HArper is definitely not a fascist. He doesn’t crave the adulation of crowds, among other things. Like the neo-cons he is definitely a trotskyite.

  31. Jim Rootham's avatar
    Jim Rootham · · Reply

    @DavidN I would describe most of the continental western democracies as having better electoral institutions than Canada.
    Also: from Fair Vote there is a summary of Arend Lijphart’s study: “Patterns of Democracy: Government Forms and Performance in Thirty-Six Countries”. Lijphart is the gold standard for research on democracy.
    From the summary:

    Lijphart cites a study on government-voter proximity which applied two measures
    to a series of nations. The first was the distance on a ten point left-right scale
    between the government position and position of the median voter. The second
    calculated the percentage of voters between the government position and the
    median citizen. “The smaller these two distances are,” notes Lijphart, “the more
    representative the government is of the citizens’ policy preferences.”
    Both distances are smaller in consensus democracies than majoritarian
    democracies, with correlations statistically significant at the 5 percent level.

    “The general pattern discovered…was that in consensus democracies the
    differences between winners and losers were significantly smaller than in
    majoritarian democracies…the difference in satisfaction is more than 16
    percentage points smaller in the typical consensus than in the typical majoritarian
    democracy. The correlation is highly significant (at the 1 percent level).”

    After applying two measures of economic disparity (based on comparing the
    income share of the top and bottom 20 percent of households, and comparing top
    and bottom deciles), Lijphart concluded consensus democracy is strongly related
    to lower levels of economic disparity.

    While Lijphart’s assessment indicates supporters of consensus democracies
    cannot boast of economic superiority, neither can the supporters of majoritarian
    systems or critics of proportional representation. Lijphart emphasized “the most
    important conclusion is…majoritarian democracies [contrary to popular myth] are
    clearly not superior to consensus democracies in managing the economy…”

    But an even better and perhaps less debatable measure of good environmental
    policy would be energy efficiency. Lijphart used the World Bank’s figures for GDP
    divided by total energy consumption for the years 1990 to 1994. “The correlation
    between consensus democracy and energy efficiency is extremely strong
    (significant at the 1 percent level) and unaffected by the introduction of level of
    development as a control variable.”

  32. DavidN's avatar

    Jim: I’m sure I don’t need to add that correlation isn’t causation, but let’s suppose there are causal effects, are you saying PR is better than FPTP because it can lead to lower energy efficiency, possibly lower economic disparity, and closer representation to the median voter? If so, I stand by my comment that this debate is an indulgent exercise.
    If only the voting mechanism was the main driver of welfare (however you want to define welfare) but clearly it’s not by any cursory observation, most of the third world comes to mind. As I’ve already stated, the gains from democratisation are already realised in countries like Canada. Unless you have more cogent references I doubt very much making cosmetic changes to voting mechanisms in countries with already well developed institutions will make things ‘better’.

  33. DavidN's avatar

    *higher energy efficiency

  34. Jim Rootham's avatar
    Jim Rootham · · Reply

    @DavidN
    We are apparently disagreeing over values. I value all of those things a lot. You apparently find no value in them.
    You are also claiming perfection for Canada and like countries. This I also reject.

  35. dcardno's avatar

    “Institutional racism does not have to be intentional to exist”
    No – but it does have to be based on race, no? This is based on geography – the non-minority (or different minority) voters living in those ridings are equally under-represented, and the minority voters living in rural ridings are equally over-represented. If minority voters (in aggregate) are concerned, we should expect to see them moving to rural or suburban areas (or PEI) ‘so their votes count’ (granted, that’s not much motivation).
    Political parties tend to treat minority voters as if they will vote monolithically, and since they are the experts in how people vote and what motivates their vote, I will trust that their assessment is at least not a long way off. Given that, it may be that as a group minority voters have disproportionate voting influence.

  36. dcardno's avatar

    @ JimRootham:
    “A government getting a majority after being found in contempt of parliament strikes me as pretty compelling evidence for a change.”
    Really – I find it pretty compelling evidence the the Contempt of Parliament issues was a disingenuous bit of political theatre that a plurality of voters saw through. It is possible (and perhaps likely) that a majority of voters saw it as a sham so it didn’t affect their votes, but they were not going to vote for the Tories anyway.
    I am not sure that you can prove that either view is correct, so I conclude that this observation isn’t “evidence” for very much, actually.

  37. Jim Rootham's avatar
    Jim Rootham · · Reply

    Say what???!!
    You didn’t pay attention to what the Speaker said did you?
    Describing that as political theatre is a declaration of foolish ignorance.

  38. Unknown's avatar

    dcardno: you mean 61% of voters against the Conservatives is a sham they saw through?

  39. DavidN's avatar

    Jim: On the contrary, I may or may not support policies with respect to energy efficiency, economic equality, etc. on their merits and my values but trying to disguise policy preferences for improvements in democratic institutions is disingenuous. I would’ve thought debates about institutional quality/characteristics would be based on their merits on political stability and social cohesion as opposed to their propensity for certain policies. If you want to debate the merits of certain policies do so.

  40. Jim Rootham's avatar
    Jim Rootham · · Reply

    The first two points were based on government attitudes matching population attitudes and the degree of satisfaction of the minority (losing side) with government. Those are independent of particular policy.
    I would have thought that by this point energy efficiency would be a universal goal, while the particular policy to achieve it is up for debate.

  41. dcardno's avatar

    “I would have thought that by this point energy efficiency would be a universal goal”
    Why? Surely not without consideration of capital cost versus ongoing energy cost. If “a universal goal” does not lead to majority votes, then maybe it ain’t so universal, eh? – and if it does, then there is no nead to fiddle with the voting system to achieve it. As DavidN pointed out, there is no linkage in the issues in any event.
    “You didn’t pay attention to what the Speaker said did you?”
    Sure I did – two partisan votes for contempt, followed by a non-confidence vote along party lines. Theatre it was, and theatre it remains.

  42. Jim Rootham's avatar
    Jim Rootham · · Reply

    I can’t describe that position both accurately and politely, so I am not event going to try.

  43. JohnNorthey's avatar
    JohnNorthey · · Reply

    Pretty clear to me that the biggest issue our current system has is growth areas vs non-growth (or shrinking) areas.
    Brampton is a (very) rapid growth area, thus will be very underrepresented in a FPTP type system. Thunder Bay is a shrinking area thus will be over-represented in a FPTP type system. This is even if the ridings were adjusted every 5-10 years as change is always occurring.
    Of course, many fight proportional representation since it would prevent a minority from having absolute power (ala Chrétien or Harper). The idea that if Greens had a few seats and, say, the CHP had one or two would cause total chaos to ensue is just silly. Germany has had proportional rep for decades and has been run very well most would agree. The trick is for the parties to accept they won’t get the power Harper now has (and Chrétien had) and to work together. IE: If a small party (say the Greens) demanded something that was viewed as unacceptable then (gasp!) the Liberals & PC’s might work together. You say it can’t happen? But it did many times in the last 5 years.
    Of course, many see it as a good thing for immigrant based ridings to have a weaker vote than long standing ridings – but then we are back to the original argument.

  44. dcardno's avatar

    I can’t describe that position both accurately and politely, so I am not event going to try.
    Gee – that’s pretty convincing!
    Your going-in comment was that election of a government you disliked (for whatever reason) was evidence that we needed to change our electoral system. I can describe that position accurately and politely: although you seem like a smart guy, you are not fit to engage in political activities in a democracy.

  45. Roland's avatar

    Post-WWII Europe is an OK playground for PR, since there was nothing serious for governments to do. NATO and the US hegemon took care of all geopolitical questions, while Bretton Woods and a welfare state consensus took care of everything else.
    Under those conditions, you can play around with as many parties and coalitions as you like. Do a square dance, a line dance, a chicken dance.
    But PR’s performance in times of crisis is simply awful. Westminster-style FPP is much superior in crunch time.
    Look at the political mess of today’s Israel. If they only had FPP, they would have had a true peace a long time ago. As it is, none of their fractured coalitions can do anything except repeat the same old mistakes.
    A popular assembly must not only reflect the segments of opinion, it must resolve the vectors into a direction for policy.
    Regarding the supposed “rural bias” in Canada’s electoral system, all I can say is this: that rural bias doesn’t go nearly far enough to offset the metropolitan bias inherent in our mode of political economy.

  46. Unknown's avatar

    Roland:
    PR may be unable to reach a consensus. But Westminster set the ground for constant lurching back and forth where half the job of the new government is to scrap whatever the previous one did thinking it had a strong mandate ( from 39% of the vote…).
    If you don’t have some consensus and basic civility, something that is currently fast fraying in Canada, you want get nowhere, whatever the system.
    Don’t confuse the map with the territory.

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