My belief remains that incremental or cosmetic alterations in the system of elections are insufficient; there has to be a significant shift.
While ‘none of the above’ (NOTA) or the right to recall could have some impact, transformative reforms need to be addressed. For instance, there must be a serious debate about whether the existing model of first past the post (FPTP) can be replaced by proportional representation (PR). Let’s understand these terms:
PR is the idea that seats in Parliament should be allocated so that they are in proportion to the votes cast; FPTP, on the other hand, aligns itself with the rather simple principle that the candidate with the maximum number of votes wins.
Clearly, FPTP comes with its share of problems. For one, it disregards a sizeable number of votes. Think about it: if one candidate wins 3,50,000 votes and the other gets 3,50,001 votes, then there is little regard for 3,50,000 votes and voters.
Second, it encourages candidate-centred voting. The politician who gets just one more vote wields
disproportionate power. Consequently, FPTP brings with it a desperation to win elections, using all means, fair or foul.
Last, parties win a disproportionate number of seats under FPTP, which is detrimental to the interests of a democracy. In 2014, the BJP swept to power with 28 seats (out of 543), i.e., 52 per cent of seats with only 31.3 per cent of the votes. In 2004, the Congress came to power with just 26.5 per cent of the votes; and most ironically in 1999, the BJP came to power despite getting a vote share five percentage points lower than that of the Congress. This is an insult to the Indian voter and
detrimental to a democracy.
Now, unlike FPTP, Proportional Representation (now adopted by over 90 democracies in the world) recognizes every vote. In multi-lingual, multi-religious countries like India, it is sensitive to diversity, ensuring that all sections are fairly represented in the election. It has the potential to reduce the impact of money, caste and communal politics, as candidates cease having constituencies where they can purchase votes. Last, parties gain seats in proportion to the number of votes cast for them.
Let’s consider this through a hypothetical example. Let us assume that the Congress, the BJP, the
Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP), and the Trinamool Congress stand for elections. Depending on the number of seats they contest, they make a list of their own candidates, all selected democratically by the party members. Voters will vote for a party, and based on the percentage of votes gathered, candidates are selected on a priority basis for Parliament.
In the 16th Lok Sabha elections, let’s compare how parties were represented under the FPTP model, and how Parliament would have looked if PR had been adopted.
The results are startling!
16th LOK SABHA (AS PER FIRST PAST THE POST)
Bharatiya Janata Party 31.3% votes - seats 282
Indian National Congress 19.5% - seats 44
All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam 3.3% - seats 37
All India Trinamool Congress 3.8% - seats 34
Biju Janata Dal 1.7% - seats 20
Shiv Sena 1.9% - seats 18
Telugu Desam Party 2.5% - seats 16
Telangana Rashtra Samithi 1.6% - seats 11
Communist Party of India (Marxist) 3.2% - seats 9
Others 31.2% - seats 63
16th LOK SABHA (AS PER PROPORTIONAL PRESENTATION)
Bharatiya Janata Party 31.3% - seats 169
Indian National Congress 19.5% - seats 105
Bahujan Samaj Party 4.3% - seats 23
All India Trinamool Congress 3.8% - seats 21
Samajwadi Party 3.4% - seats 19
Communist Party of India (Marxist) 3.2% - seats 18
Telugu Desam Party 2.5% - seats 14
All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam 3.3% - seats 13
Aam Aadmi Party 2.0% - seats 12
Others 26.7% - seats 135
This is not to say that PR does not come with its complications and limitations. But a debate regarding its merits and demerits will ensure that we, as a nation, will arrive at the best possible set of electoral practices. Similar debates need to be had about the advantages of having a presidential form of government as against the Westminster model, and the direct election of the chief minister by the
general public rather than by the elected MLAs.
But the most important reform that has to be undertaken is the democratization of all political parties.
Internal elections supervised by the Election Commission should be compulsory. The account details and the sources of funds should be made available.
I learnt about these subjects from Dr Jayaprakash Narayan of Loksatta movement of AP. You might like to hear him a remarkable lecture on political system of India at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HghqICCty6M
While ‘none of the above’ (NOTA) or the right to recall could have some impact, transformative reforms need to be addressed. For instance, there must be a serious debate about whether the existing model of first past the post (FPTP) can be replaced by proportional representation (PR). Let’s understand these terms:
PR is the idea that seats in Parliament should be allocated so that they are in proportion to the votes cast; FPTP, on the other hand, aligns itself with the rather simple principle that the candidate with the maximum number of votes wins.
Clearly, FPTP comes with its share of problems. For one, it disregards a sizeable number of votes. Think about it: if one candidate wins 3,50,000 votes and the other gets 3,50,001 votes, then there is little regard for 3,50,000 votes and voters.
Second, it encourages candidate-centred voting. The politician who gets just one more vote wields
disproportionate power. Consequently, FPTP brings with it a desperation to win elections, using all means, fair or foul.
Last, parties win a disproportionate number of seats under FPTP, which is detrimental to the interests of a democracy. In 2014, the BJP swept to power with 28 seats (out of 543), i.e., 52 per cent of seats with only 31.3 per cent of the votes. In 2004, the Congress came to power with just 26.5 per cent of the votes; and most ironically in 1999, the BJP came to power despite getting a vote share five percentage points lower than that of the Congress. This is an insult to the Indian voter and
detrimental to a democracy.
Now, unlike FPTP, Proportional Representation (now adopted by over 90 democracies in the world) recognizes every vote. In multi-lingual, multi-religious countries like India, it is sensitive to diversity, ensuring that all sections are fairly represented in the election. It has the potential to reduce the impact of money, caste and communal politics, as candidates cease having constituencies where they can purchase votes. Last, parties gain seats in proportion to the number of votes cast for them.
Let’s consider this through a hypothetical example. Let us assume that the Congress, the BJP, the
Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP), and the Trinamool Congress stand for elections. Depending on the number of seats they contest, they make a list of their own candidates, all selected democratically by the party members. Voters will vote for a party, and based on the percentage of votes gathered, candidates are selected on a priority basis for Parliament.
In the 16th Lok Sabha elections, let’s compare how parties were represented under the FPTP model, and how Parliament would have looked if PR had been adopted.
The results are startling!
16th LOK SABHA (AS PER FIRST PAST THE POST)
Bharatiya Janata Party 31.3% votes - seats 282
Indian National Congress 19.5% - seats 44
All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam 3.3% - seats 37
All India Trinamool Congress 3.8% - seats 34
Biju Janata Dal 1.7% - seats 20
Shiv Sena 1.9% - seats 18
Telugu Desam Party 2.5% - seats 16
Telangana Rashtra Samithi 1.6% - seats 11
Communist Party of India (Marxist) 3.2% - seats 9
Others 31.2% - seats 63
16th LOK SABHA (AS PER PROPORTIONAL PRESENTATION)
Bharatiya Janata Party 31.3% - seats 169
Indian National Congress 19.5% - seats 105
Bahujan Samaj Party 4.3% - seats 23
All India Trinamool Congress 3.8% - seats 21
Samajwadi Party 3.4% - seats 19
Communist Party of India (Marxist) 3.2% - seats 18
Telugu Desam Party 2.5% - seats 14
All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam 3.3% - seats 13
Aam Aadmi Party 2.0% - seats 12
Others 26.7% - seats 135
This is not to say that PR does not come with its complications and limitations. But a debate regarding its merits and demerits will ensure that we, as a nation, will arrive at the best possible set of electoral practices. Similar debates need to be had about the advantages of having a presidential form of government as against the Westminster model, and the direct election of the chief minister by the
general public rather than by the elected MLAs.
But the most important reform that has to be undertaken is the democratization of all political parties.
Internal elections supervised by the Election Commission should be compulsory. The account details and the sources of funds should be made available.
I learnt about these subjects from Dr Jayaprakash Narayan of Loksatta movement of AP. You might like to hear him a remarkable lecture on political system of India at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HghqICCty6M
3 comments:
Very nicely presented. It has been more than 70 years since we are independent. The system of governance has failed the citizens. There are 3 arms of the democracy - legislature, executive and the judiciary. The legislature has been most efficient - made laws left, right and center, making a mockery of the citizens. The executive is a law unto themselves harassing the citizens and making undue and wrongful demands, thereby blackmailing the citizens. The judiciary - the less said the better. A contract cannot be enforced promptly in the courts of the laws. Simply write off your dues if one has to exist, no redressal by courts can be expected. They breed anti social elements just to recover their rightful dues - by Supari. The fourth estate in India is just a bunch of rogues, rascals and idiots, swinging ideas and views for a few thousand rupees. Let's face it - the aspirations of Indians remain unfulfilled in 70 years, and in my view, needs to be dismantled or overhauled. Look at the Chinese model - there is no law, but order exists. Here all we have is law and no order. Who needs the media? I don't, and majority of the Indians don't. WE AS INDIANS DON'T DESERVE DEMOCRACY. When modi became prime minister, he had to tell us that we are a filthy lot, and only then we started cleaning our country. Open defamation was so horrendous, and the stench all over sickening all round. Every citizen should put in two years of service in the military, only then they will love their own country. One child policy needs to be hastily implemented for the survival not only of India, but the planet itself. The country should be divided into zones for better administration, not federal. That is the beginning of fragmenting the country into pieces. One uniform civil code is the need of the hour. Have more views but can't express it all here. Thank you for your time. Alok Vaid
How would this system ensure good representatives by parties? Today winability is only merit, not integrity. If party wins how would fair distribution of regional interests be determined, or other minority within a party?
Sorry, I could not explain as much as you might have wanted me to. Do read up on PR (especially the German model) and listen to JP's speech.
Details can be accessed on googling and here is the wikipedia link https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proportional_representation
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