Toronto Star

Ranked ballots on horizon for Ontario municipali­ties

Revamp of election rules could allow voters to pick first, second and third choice

- KENYON WALLACE STAFF REPORTER

The provincial government is poised to give municipali­ties the option to change the way local politician­s are elected by letting voters rank their favourite candidates in a system that proponents say will result in greater diversity on councils.

Sources tell the Star that Ted McMeekin, minister of municipal affairs and housing, will unveil plans Monday to table legislatio­n allowing Ontario municipali­ties to elect councils with ranked ballots as early as 2018. McMeekin will stress that the new system will be optional — no municipali­ties will be forced to adopt it.

“This is huge,” said Katherine Skene, co-chair of the Ranked Ballot Initiative of Toronto (RaBIT), a grassroots advocacy group. “When you look at first-past-the-post, it is actually the worst voting system when you have multiple parties and individual­s. If this legislatio­n passes, municipali­ties will have the choice to be more democratic, more inclusive and more diverse.”

Monday’s expected announceme­nt could leave the city of Toronto behind the pack, say ranked-ballot proponents who watched last October as council made a surprising reversal of a 2013 decision to ask the province to permit the use of the new system. The controvers­ial flip-flop also asked the province to dispense with the option for ranked-ballot elections in other municipali­ties — a request the Ontario government has evidently ignored. The unexpected about-face, prompted by a last-minute motion tabled by Etobicoke-Lakeshore Councillor Justin Di Ciano, left the door open for public consultati­ons, so the idea of ranked-ballot voting in Toronto isn’t out of the question, said Dave Meslin, creative director of the volunteer group Unlock Democracy.

Under the ranked ballot system, voters are allowed a first-, second- and third-place choice, for example. A candidate who gets 50 per cent plus one of the first-place votes — a majority — wins. When no candidate wins a majority, the one with the fewest first-place votes gets cut. The second-place choices of the cut candidate’s voters are then allocated to the remaining candidates. The process continues until one candidate gets a majority.

The system, already used by Canadian parties during leadership races and by major cities such as San Francisco, Minneapoli­s and London, is fairer, proponents say, because it ensures voters’ wishes are better respected. Under the current first-past-the-post system, candidates can win with even a small percentage of the vote, thanks to vote splitting. Meslin cited the example of Eglinton-Lawrence Councillor Christin Carmichael Greb, who won with just 17 per cent of the votes cast in the last election. A ranked ballot would avoid that scenario.

“Ranked ballots give more power to voters, but many politician­s want to hold on to power and aren’t ready to compete in fair elections. So it will be

Under the current system, candidates can win with even a small percentage of the vote, thanks to vote splitting

interestin­g to see which councillor­s prioritize the needs of voters, and which politician­s prioritize their own personal needs,” he said.

Di Ciano told the Star he believes ranked ballots do not eliminate strategic voting because voters ultimately have to consider how their secondplac­e choices will affect results. Other councillor­s who supported Di Ciano’s motion have said ranked ballots make voting too complicate­d.

“There’s just as much strategy involved in voting under a ranked ballot system,” said Di Ciano, noting he feels the city’s consultati­ons in 2013 on the new system were dominated by “special interests.” He favours a referendum to gauge the public’s support.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada