
Flawed Role Model: What his hero Robert Muldoon would say with a scowl, Prime Minister John Key says with a smile, but both: past masters of the disingenuous statement. Prime Minister Key would have it that
supplementary member is a proportional voting system, just less ‘volatile’. Here Prime Minister Muldoon is about to learn that, even with the help of first-past-the-post, 35.9% of the vote would be insufficient to prolong his
elective dictatorship. Labour, polling only 43% of the votes, gained a 19-seat majority—a salutary reminder of how fundamentally undemocratic such systems are.
Photograph Evening Post 1984
There are two mixed member systems on offer.
Mixed member proportional and mixed member
majoritarian, also known as both supplementary member and parallel voting. At a glance, one system appears to be fully proportional, and the other semi proportional. It is being
promoted by big business as a sensible compromise between first-past-the-post and mixed member proportional.
But one glance at the outcomes of supplementary member elections gives lie to that description. Rather than being slightly more proportional than first-past-the-post, it is more disproportional than that legendarily disproportionate system. If Aotearoa was voting with the supplementary member system on Saturday week, the Green Party could be expected to win only four seats, rather than the 16 that
current polling suggests is possible.
The reason supplementary member produces such a skewed result is not entirely intuitive. It is a salutary lesson in why the arcane art of designing fair electoral systems shouldn’t be something that the general population should ever have to concern itself with. It is the reason that determining significant changes to a nation’s democracy should be subjected to a full-blown commission of inquiry, and only then should there be a referendum, and a binding one—but that is another issue.
The
Royal Commission on the Electoral System carefully considered supplementary member for Aotearoa, and found it wanting:
- • The winning party receives a disproportionately high number of seats
- • The runner-up receives a disproportionately low number of seats
- • The third party is all but extinguished.
The superficial appeal of supplementary member means that a number of countries have proceeded to try it, seeing it as a low risk means of introducing a modicum of proportionally. Some, including Kazakhstan, have since reverted to first-past-the-post, finding that the supplementary seats were seen as a rort.
Of the 17 countries using mixed member proportional, the only
Japan is classed as a full democracy. But aside from its patently disproportional electoral outcomes, New Zealanders should be wary of using Japan as a democratic role model, given that the
sovereignty of its people is illusionary:
Since the end of the American occupation, Japan has been regarded by the West as a democracy, but in reality it works very differently from any Western democracy: indeed, its modus operandi is so different that it is doubtful whether the term is very meaningful.
The particular rort that is rewarded under the supplementary member is the
ancient art of the gerrymander. In a robust proportional system, the government of the day can preside over any amount of gerrymandering, but it will have no effect on the overall election result—Epsom-style Machiavellianism excepted.
On Saturday, New Zealanders should vote to retain mixed member proportional and hasten its overdue tune-up.
1 2 3, tune-up MMP:
Very Near to Being World’s
Best Electoral System
Ranking Not Ticking to
Tame Party Lists
Dispatching Electoral Commission
Review Room Elephants
Overdue Tune-Up will Leave MMP
Better Loved than Understood
Tactics and Polls or
Preference Voting
Mixed Member Means
Rout No Landslide
Supplementary Member in Practice is
Mixed Member Disproportional
Graduatedly and Preferentially
Fixing the Fixed Threshold
Possible Change in Six Years or
Definite Change in Three
Electoral Commission Review and
Mixed Member Misinformation
Green Party Dependant Upon
Proportional and Preferential
Party Vote Green Growth
for a Richer Aotearoa
Fascination with the
Beauty of Models
First-Past-The-Post ‘Win’
Argument for Preferential
National’s Power Sets Scene to
Retain and Change MMP
Prendergast Loss Somehow
Pinned on Preferential
Ultimately Successful
Mäori Roll Model
MMP Could be
Ninety-Nine Not Out
Out of All Proportional
Aussies Eat Their Greens
Voting For and Against and With
First-Past-the-Post
Aotearoa has
MMP Half Right
Cartoon:
Shucks Shirty
Proportional Preferential and
What’s to fix with MMP
Part of a hope-based network restoring and enjoying the Mahurangi
Editor Cimino Cole
Good article, good graphic, good ticks.