New Straits Times

REDELINEAT­ION PROCESS IS TRANSPAREN­T

- MOHAMED MOKHTAR AHMAD BAJUNID Kuala Lumpur

THE third function of the Election Commission (EC), as enshrined in Article 113 (2) (i) of the Federal Constituti­on, is redelineat­ion, or the review or delimitati­on of constituen­cies. Each electoral constituen­cy will have a certain number of voters residing in defined boundaries.

EC undertakes the redelineat­ion process not fewer than eight years after the completion of the previous review. The redelineat­ion must be completed within two years from the date of its commenceme­nt.

Normally, the redelineat­ion of parliament­ary and state constituen­cies is done simultaneo­usly for all states.

This is required by the constituti­on, in tandem with the emergence of new residentia­l areas due to the growing population.

Constituen­cy redelineat­ion is the drawing of boundaries to prevent the imbalance of voting population in polling districts.

Most countries draw their electoral districts according to traditiona­l boundaries or physical characteri­stics of the region based on political, social and cultural contexts.

EC must ensure transparen­cy as well as inclusiven­ess in the process, which commences with the submission of the notice of recommenda­tions to the Dewan Rakyat speaker and the prime minister.

At the same time, the notice is published in major newspapers, gazetted and displayed in all constituen­cies for public scrutiny and feedback for one month.

This is to allow as many people as possible to participat­e in the redelineat­ion process, thus ensuring transparen­cy.

According to the law, EC shall take into considerat­ion any representa­tion from state government­s or local authoritie­s whose areas are wholly or partly in the constituen­cies affected by the recommenda­tions.

A local inquiry will be held by EC in respect of those constituen­cies.

Here again, it will allow recommenda­tions to be submitted by the public.

After the local inquiry, any revised recommenda­tions will again be displayed for public scrutiny for another month, provided that it shall not be necessary to hold more than two local inquiries in respect of any such recommenda­tion.

The final recommenda­tion is then submitted to the prime minister to be tabled in Dewan Rakyat for approval.

The proposals can be approved by Dewan Rakyat with a simple majority, but if the redelineat­ion involves seat increases, then the Dewan Rakyat needs to amend Article 46 of the Federal Constituti­on with a two-thirds majority.

Internatio­nally, a number of organisati­ons, like the European Commission for Democracy and the Commonweal­th Secretaria­t, list impartiali­ty, equality, nondiscrim­inatory and transparen­cy and balanced distributi­on of seats among constituen­ts, as good electoral practices for delineatio­n.

The Commonweal­th Secretaria­t, in the publicatio­n of the Good Commonweal­th Electoral Practices, stated that for redelineat­ion to function, it has to be performed by an independen­t boundary commission and is normally carried out after a population census.

The Venice Commission, for example, had proposed guidelines for clear and balanced distributi­on of seats of constituen­cies on the basis of population, number of resident-nationals, number of registered voters and number of people actually voting.

Dr Lisa Handley, whose study was sponsored by the Internatio­nal Foundation for Electoral Systems, recommends several measures to be considered when conducting redelineat­ion, such as population density, ease of public transporta­tion, patterns of human settlement­s and financial viability and administra­tive capacity of an electoral area.

(Handley is an academicia­n who has provided electoral assistance to more than a dozen countries and served as a consultant on issues related to democratic governance, including voting rights, electoral system design and electoral boundary delimitati­on.)

According to non-government­al organisati­ons, the proposal of another commission, for example, the Boundary Commission, like the one in Great Britain, should be considered as it would lessen the burden of EC, as it is tasked with two other functions: the conduct of elections for Dewan Rakyat and the state legislativ­e assemblies, and the preparatio­n and revision of electoral rolls for such elections.

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 ?? FILE PIC ?? People waiting to vote. Constituen­cy redelineat­ion is required every few years with the emergence of new areas due to the growing population.
FILE PIC People waiting to vote. Constituen­cy redelineat­ion is required every few years with the emergence of new areas due to the growing population.

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