Wednesday, September 3, 2014

How would proportional representation work in York Region and Durham?


How would proportional representation work in York Region and Durham Region, for federal elections?

Polls show more than 70% of Canadians support proportional representation for Canadian elections. Canada’s Liberal Party has opened the door to start implementing PR within one year of the 2015 election. The NDP and Greens fully support PR.

So this is no longer an academic discussion. This is a practical discussion: if Canada gets PR, how would it work in York Region and Durham?
 
Mixed Proportional

With the Mixed Proportional system, you have two votes. With one, you help elect a local MP as we do today.
 
With the other vote, you can vote for the party you want to see in government, and for your favourite of your party’s regional candidates. So you help elect a few regional MPs, to top-up the local results so that every vote counts: it’s proportional.
 
You can vote for the regional candidate you prefer: it’s personal. There are no closed lists. Voters elect all the MPs.
 
This open list method was recommended both by our Law Commission and by the Jenkins Commission in the UK. Jenkins’ colourful explanation accurately predicted why closed lists would be rejected in Canada: additional members locally anchored are “more easily assimilable into the political culture and indeed the Parliamentary system than would be a flock of unattached birds clouding the sky and wheeling under central party directions.”
 
These two models both let citizens of regions across Canada elect competing MPs: a local MP, and a few regional MPs from a “top-up region” based in your area, likely including someone you helped elect.
 
Every vote counts. Fair Vote Canada says “We must give rural and urban voters in every province, territory and regional community effective votes and fair representation in both government and opposition.”
 
Two models

Under the Law Commission of Canada`s model, the 15 MPs York Region and Durham Region will elect in 2015 would be in one “top-up” region with nine local MPs, from larger ridings. The other six would be regional MPs, topping up the total results to make them match the vote shares.   


Under the “moderate” model based on the UK`s Jenkins Commission Report, York Region’s ten MPs would be in one top-up region with six local MPs and four regional MPs. The five MPs from Durham Region would be three local MPs and two regional MPs.

How would it work out?
 
So what would these two models look like?

This simulation is only if people voted as they did on May 2, 2011. When every vote counts, turnout will likely be at least 6% higher, and no one will have to cast a “strategic vote.” We would have had different candidates - more women, and more diversity of all kinds. We could even have different parties. Who can say what would be the result of real democratic elections?
Meanwhile, I’ve done projections on the votes cast in 2011.
 
One-region model
 
On the votes cast in 2011, the winner-take-all results in the 15 ridings of York Region and Durham Region would be 14 Conservative MPs and one Liberal. Yet those voters cast only 52% of their ballots for Conservatives, 25% for Liberals, 18% for New Democrats, and 4% Greens. If every vote counted equally, on those votes on the 2015 boundaries Conservative voters would elect eight MPs, Liberal voters four, and New Democrat voters three. The regional MPs for each party would be the party’s regional candidates who ended up with the most support across the region. (If Green Party voters had cast another 10,500 votes in those 15 ridings, they would have elected an MP.)
 
Since I’m projecting from the 2011 votes, I’ll start with the 2011 candidates. Depending on local nominations, let’s suppose the nine local MPs were Conservatives Peter Van Loan, Jim Flaherty, Peter Kent, Bev Oda, Julian Fantino, Chris Alexander, Lois Brown, and Paul Calandra or Costas Menegakis; and Liberal John McCallum.
 
In that case, Liberal voters would also elect three regional MPs, and New Democrats three. That might be Liberals Mark Holland, Bryon Wilfert, and Dan McTeague or Mario Ferri or Karen Mock; and New Democrats Chris Buckley, Nadine Hawkins and Sylvia Gerl or Trish McAuliffe.
 
Two-region model
 
On the votes cast in 2011, the winner-take-all results in York Region’s new ten ridings would be nine Conservative MPs and one Liberal. Yet those voters cast only 52% of their votes for Conservatives, 28% Liberals, 16% NDP, and 3% Green. If every vote counted equally, on those votes on the 2015 boundaries Conservative voters would elect five MPs, Liberal voters three MPs, and New Democrat voters two.
 
Suppose the six local MPs were Conservatives Peter Van Loan, Peter Kent, Julian Fantino, Lois Brown, and Paul Calandra or Costas Menegakis; and Liberal John McCallum. In that case, Liberal voters would also elect two regional MPs, and New Democrats two. That might be Liberals Bryon Wilfert and Mario Ferri or Karen Mock; and New Democrats Nadine Hawkins and Sylvia Gerl or Janice Hagan. 

On the votes cast in 2011, the winner-take-all results in the five new ridings of Durham Region would be five Conservative MPs, and no one else. Yet those voters cast only 51% of their votes for Conservatives, 23% NDP, 21% Liberals, and 4% Green. If every vote counted equally, on those votes on the 2015 boundaries Conservative voters would elect three MPs, New Democrat voters one and Liberal voters one.

Suppose the three local MPs were Conservatives Jim Flaherty, Bev Oda, and Chris Alexander. In that case, New Democrat voters might elect as a regional MP Chris Buckley or Trish McAuliffe. Liberal voters might elect as a regional MP Mark Holland.
Regional candidates
 
How would party members nominate and rank a group of regional candidates? It could be done on-line, and with live conventions. Likely party members in each region would decide to nominate the same candidates nominated in the local ridings, and some additional regional candidates. (In Nova Scotia in 2011, in all 11 ridings the Liberals nominated only men. Additional regional candidates would surely have included some women, and since polls show 90% of Canadians want to see more women elected, we’ll elect women when given the chance.)
 
But voters would have the final say, since they can vote for their party’s regional candidate they prefer.
 
For local MP, you can vote for the candidate you like best without hurting your party, since the party make-up of parliament is set by the party votes. In New Zealand, 35% of voters split their votes that way.
 
What would regional MPs do?

How would regional MPs operate? The regional MPs would cover several ridings each. Just the way it’s done in Scotland.

Canada-wide consequences.
 
With the new 30 MPs, on the 2011 votes transposed by Elections Canada onto the new boundaries, the winner-take-all results for the 338 MPs would be 188 Conservative, 109 NDP, 36 Liberal, 4 Bloc, and 1 Green.
 
When every vote counts, the result is: 140 Conservatives, 104 NDP, 64 Liberals, 19 Bloc, and 11 Green, using full proportionality on province-wide totals.
 
With these two mixed models, the projected results are 140 or 141 Conservatives, 106 or 107 NDP, 63 or 67 Liberals, 15 or 17 Bloc, and 8 or 10 Greens. Close to perfect proportionality, while keeping all MPs accountable to real local and regional communities.
 
Across Ontario, Liberal voters would elect 31 or 33 MPs rather than 14, NDP voters would elect 32 rather than 24, and Greens would elect 3 or 5, while Conservatives would elect 53 MPs rather than 83. 
 
Canadian diversity
 
As Stéphane Dion says "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."
 
Each province still has the same number of MPs it has today. No constitutional amendment is needed.
 
This is not a partisan scheme. Unrepresented Conservative voters would elect eight more Quebec MPs than in 2011, one more in Newfoundland, one more in PEI, one more in Northern Ontario, and one more on Vancouver Island.
 
Of course, proportional representation would mean a lot for Canada. We would not likely have a one party government’s Prime Minister holding all the power. (The last Prime Minister to get more than 50% of the votes was Brian Mulroney in 1984.) Parliament would reflect the diverse voters of every province.
 
An exciting prospect: voters have new power to elect who they like. New voices from new forces in Parliament. No party rolls the dice and wins an artificial majority. Cooperation will have a higher value than vitriolic rhetoric. Instead of having only a local MP -- whom you quite likely didn’t vote for -- you can also go to one of your diverse regional MPs, all of whom had to face the voters. Governments will have to listen to MPs, and MPs will have to really listen to the people. MPs can begin to act as the public servants they are. And all party caucuses will be more diverse.
 
With this kind of power-sharing, Canada would look quite different.

If we had a Proportional Representation voting system, here are only a few of the things Canadians could have accomplished over the past twenty years:
Ø Engaged and motivated voters
Ø A reinvigorated democratic system
Ø More women MPs and a fair mix of party representation

Our electoral system is broken and people know it:
Ø Disengaged citizens are ignoring their right to vote
Ø A dysfunctional conflict-oriented political process
Ø Majority governments with minority voting results
 
Poll results on proportional representation

Environics asked in 2013 “Some people favor bringing in a form of proportional representation. This means that the total number of seats held by each party in Parliament would be roughly equivalent to their percentage of the national popular vote. Would you strongly support, somewhat support, somewhat oppose, or strongly oppose moving towards a system of proportional representation in Canadian elections?”

Interviewing for this Environics National Telephone Survey was conducted between March 18th – 24th, 2013, among a national random sample of 1,004 adults. The margin of error for a sample of this size is +/- 3.1%, 19 times out of 20.


Result: support 70%, oppose 18%, depends 6%, don’t know 6%.
 
The Environics poll showed 93% of Green voters support proportional representation while 4% oppose; 82% of NDP voters support it while 11% oppose; 77% of Liberal voters support it while 15% oppose; 62% of Conservative supporters support it while 28% oppose; and 55% of voters undecided as to party support PR while 19% oppose and 27% said “don’t know” or “depends.”
 
This is not new. Poll results have shown this for 13 years.
 
Technical note
 
The rounding method used in the simulation is highest remainder, for the same reason the Ontario Citizens Assembly chose it: it's the simplest. Germany used to use this too, on the premise that it offset the risk to proportionality of their 5% threshold. Similarly it offsets smaller region sizes.
 
Would second preferences, used in the Jenkins model, have changed any results in 2011? Sometimes, using the EKOS poll taken April 28-30, 2011, but the second preferences make no difference in York Region or Durham:

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