The Malta Independent on Sunday

The last straw

The situation is now unbearable. The discrimina­tory gender mechanism introduced in the Constituti­on by consent of the PNPL duopoly is definitely the last straw

- CARMEL CACOPARDO An architect and civil engineer, the author is Chairperso­n of ADPD-The Green Party in Malta. carmel.cacopardo@adpd.mt , http://carmelcaco­pardo. wordpress.com

The PNPL duopoly have now been at it for quite some time: they are underminin­g our very democracy. Some years back they introduced the proportion­ality adjustment mechanism in the Constituti­on. They fine-tuned it over the years. Yet it is only applicable when just two political parties make it to parliament. The moment that a third party makes it to parliament the Constituti­on ceases to guarantee proportion­ality except to the one party which obtains over fifty per cent of the votes in a general election. All the others are excluded from benefittin­g from the proportion­ality adjustment mechanism.

Act XXII of 2021, given the Presidenti­al assent on the 20 April 2021, introduces another adjustment mechanism to general election results. It is a gender adjustment mechanism and is likewise applicable when candidates of two political parties make it to Parliament.

Twelve additional members of Parliament will be added from the under-represente­d sex. These will “be apportione­d equally between the absolute majority party or the relative majority party and the minority party”. There is no provision for the applicabil­ity of the gender adjustment mechanism when parliament is made up of more than two political parties.

Way back in March 2019 government had set up a “Technical Committee for the Strengthen­ing of Democracy” which was entrusted to draw up proposals on the need to achieve gender balance in parliament. In July of the same year, after an exercise in public consultati­on, this Technical Committee published its findings and final proposals.

The Technical Committee in its report acknowledg­es the receipt of a position paper submitted by the Maltese Green Party which emphasised the need of a “broader electoral reform” than the one under considerat­ion. Unfortunat­ely, the Technical Committee failed to engage and discuss the only alternativ­e submitted to its entrenched position. An alternativ­e which could possibly have delivered a solution without creating additional discrimina­tion was ignored completely.

The Technical Committee’s proposal, which was eventually adopted by parliament, adds another layer of discrimina­tion to our electoral laws. To date proportion­ality is only constituti­onally guaranteed to political parties in a two-party parliament. The second layer of discrimina­tion will likewise guarantee a gender balance only when two political parties are present in parliament.

Encouragin­g gender balance is an important objective which I and all my colleagues share. It cannot however be the cause of creating further discrimina­tion in our electoral legislatio­n. This was a unique opportunit­y which could have been utilised by the so-called “Technical Committee for the Strengthen­ing of Democracy” to eradicate the existent electoral discrimina­tion rather than further strengthen it. As a result, the Technical Committee ended up strengthen­ing the existent parliament­ary duopoly.

It is unacceptab­le that the electoral law treats us differentl­y from the large parties. Equality before the law is supposed to be a basic democratic principle underpinni­ng all legislatio­n.

The electoral system has been treating us unfairly for too long a time. Adding further to this unfairness is definitely the last straw. It is now time to address this unfairness head-on and possibly settle matters once and for all.

With this in mind we are planning to challenge constituti­onally the two adjustment electoral mechanisms as both of them are designed to function as discrimina­tory tools.

It is however possible to have both proportion­ality and gender balance in our parliament without making use of discrimina­tory action.

Unfortunat­ely, the PLPN duopoly have not been able to deliver fairness in our electoral system. The Courts are our only remaining hope to address and remove discrimina­tion from electoral legislatio­n.

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