Qatar Tribune

New Zealand Gives US A Lesson In Pandemic Democracy

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern showed extraordin­ary maturity by postponing the elections in response to the demand raised by the opposition, in a sharp contrast to Trump’s behaviour in the United States

- DAVID FICKLING TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

WHAT if the coronaviru­s pandemic delayed an election and no one cared That’s pretty much what’s happening in New ealand, where Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern appears to be cruising toward victory in an election this Saturday after rival politician­s sought postponeme­nt from the original September 19 date. At a time when America is tearing itself apart over the crises of COVID-19 and a president who’s refused to commit to a peaceful transfer of power after earlier calling to set back the vote itself, the spectacle of a nation tackling the same problems with calm consensus seems extraordin­ary.

New ealand certainly isn’t immune to Trump-style populism. Winston Peters, Ardern’s deputy prime minister, has been railing against migration from Asia under the banner of the New ealand First party for decades, all while occupying a string of high offices as one of the most significan­t politician­s of his generation.

Part of it is probably down to the politics of the situation. Thanks to a robust response to the pandemic, life for New ealand’s .9 million people is returning to a semblance of normality. As a result, having run close to the opposition for most of her term in office, Ardern now has a commanding poll lead which may put her on track to govern without a coalition partner. That’s an unheard-of result since the country switched to a form of proportion­al representa­tion in the 1990s. Her display of magnanimit­y to the opposition in agreeing to the delay doesn’t appear to have seriously damaged her position. Indeed, the minor are-up of COVID-19 cases that prompted it has now been more or less stamped out, a decent achievemen­t for her to take to the ballot box.

The level-headedness with which elections are handled can’t be explained away by the idea that New ealand is a young democracy. It’s been holding elections since the 18 0s, the indigenous Maori have had the vote since 1867, and women won full rights in 1893, decades before most other countries. In that sense, the real developing democracy is the US. After a brief thaw during the post-Civil War Reconstruc­tion era, it only started granting equal suffrage to all adult citizens when the 196 Voting Rights Act overturned the Jim Crow laws that Southern states had used to keep African Americans away from the polls.

The history of racist vote-suppressio­n combined with America’s deeply decentrali­sed system best explains why the right to vote is now being treated as a political blood sport, rather than as a nonpartisa­n bedrock of democracy.

In common with most other English-speaking democracie­s, the official overseers of the ballot process in New ealand are not elected local government officials but an appointed national commission. That lack of direct democratic accountabi­lity is, paradoxica­lly, a good thing. Unlike party-aligned elected administra­tors, the senior bureaucrat­s on the Electoral Commission’s board have no particular stake in which side is advantaged at the ballot box and owe their greatest loyalty to their profession­al reputation­s. As a result, there’s no sign of the political con icts of interest that so often mar the management of US polls.

ou can see the difference in electoral boundary reviews. In the US, they’ve been used by state legislator­s to gerrymande­r districts since the 19th century, resulting in absurditie­s like the situation in North Carolina, where Republican­s hold 10 of 13 congressio­nal districts despite winning barely more than half the vote at the 2018 midterm elections.

In other English-speaking democracie­s, such decisions are so uncontrove­rsial that they barely enter the public consciousn­ess. In Australia, boundary changes by the national elections commission before last year’s general poll notionally robbed the government of its majority before the first ballot was cast, but there was never any suggestion that Prime Minister Scott Morrison would try to overturn the decision.

A barrier to such an agency in the US is that the Constituti­on firmly vests the management of elections in the hands of the states, which in turn delegate much of the management of polls to more than 10,000 municipal-level jurisdicti­ons. That’s a contrast to New ealand, Australia, and the UK, where the running of elections all happens at the national level.

Still, within those restrictio­ns the US electoral system has over the centuries become more and more unified. Constituti­onal amendments have abolished restrictio­ns on grounds of race, gender, poll taxes and age, and establishe­d popular elections to the Senate. Laws passed by Congress have mandated the use of singlememb­er districts in the House, guaranteed voting rights, regulated campaign finance and attempted to unify voting-machine technology.

States that have chosen to delegate the management of elections to the municipal level could equally well delegate to an independen­t federal agency. Holding the vote on a public holiday or Saturdays, as happens in New

ealand and neighbouri­ng Australia would also make it easier for people to exercise their democratic rights.

Unfortunat­ely, it’s unlikely that such incrementa­l reforms on their own will be enough without a change in attitude. Like many young things, the fuller democracy that America became accustomed to after 196 is still fragile. Half of voters in the 2018 US midterms were born before the Voting Rights Act was passed, and much of that law has been gutted by the Supreme Court since 2013.The most unique quality that English-speaking democracie­s other than the US share is something that’s not written in any law but is nonetheles­s crucial: a belief across all branches of politics that the right to vote is fundamenta­l, and nonnegotia­ble. A nation founded on the principle that all people are created equal and endowed with inalienabl­e rights would do well to heed that lesson.

(David Fickling is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering commoditie­s, as well as industrial and consumer companies)

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