The Star Malaysia

Election formula approved

Court endorses system that favours big political parties

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THE Constituti­onal Court has endorsed a Bill that amends the electoral system for Members of Parliament, effectivel­y laying the framework for the general election that is due by May 2023.

The verdict not only gives the go-ahead for the changes to be implemente­d in the coming election, it also puts to rest months of fierce debate among lawmakers over the method that will be used to allocate party-list MP seats.

In the coming election, a dual-ballot system will be used, where the electorate will cast one vote for their district candidate and another for a political party for the party-list seats.

A total of 400 constituen­cy seats are awarded to candidates who garner the most votes in each district, while 100 party-list seats are distribute­d based on a formula that takes into account a party’s national vote share. This makes up the 500 seats in Parliament’s Lower House.

A petition to the court, backed by 105 MPS and senators, took issue with the Bill’s suggested formula to use the 100 party-list seats as a divisor to calculate the proportion of party-list votes needed to win one party-list seat, claiming that this will benefit bigger parties.

Taking the 35 million votes tallied in the 2019 General Election as an example, this method of calculatio­n means that parties will need to garner at least 350,000 party-list votes to earn one party-list seat.

The group, led by Dr Rawee Maschamado­l from the single-seat New Palang Dharma Party (NPDP), asked the court to look into the legality of the Bill and whether it was lawfully adopted as it was a last-minute replacemen­t for a similar proposal that fell through.

But the nine-judge court ruled unanimousl­y that the draft law is in line with the Constituti­on and did not contain any statement contrary to or inconsiste­nt with the law.

Political scientist Napon Jatusripit­ak, a visiting fellow at Singapore’s ISEAS – Yusof Ishak Institute, said the proposed formula for allocating the 100 party-list seats poses an institutio­nal disadvanta­ge to smaller parties.

“Larger parties will benefit from this as they will likely meet the higher threshold required to win party-list seats,” said Dr Napon, noting that parties like opposition Pheu Thai have enough resources and candidates to contest in all constituen­cies, unlike smaller parties.

Small parties, including the NPDP, prefer another calculatio­n method that uses the 500 Lower House seats as the divisor.

Applying this method to the 35 million votes in the 2019 election, parties would need 70,000 votes to earn one party-list seat – just a fifth of the votes required under the “100” formula, said Dr Napon.

Earlier this year, a majority of lawmakers agreed to the “500” formula of calculatio­n. But this version of the Bill was dropped in August after a lack of quorums in Parliament sessions where it was scheduled to be discussed.

Lawmakers had to fall back on an earlier version of the Bill proposed by the Election Commission that introduced the “100” formula.

The Bill will now be sent to Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha who will present it for royal endorsemen­t before it becomes law.

The court’s decision on Wednesday will result in more political manoeuvrin­g as parties adapt to the changes, said Dr Napon, adding that winning constituen­cy seats will become a bigger focus for medium and small-sized parties.

“You can expect more parties to start merging, or recruiting more candidates who are able to pull constituen­cy votes. The focus will move away from winning party-list seats as those are harder to earn,” he said.

Political punters have been keeping a close eye on Prayut, who on Wednesday appointed three new ministers to his Cabinet.

Speculatio­n has been rife in recent weeks that he could leave the ruling Palang Pracharath Party to join the new Ruam Thai Sang Chart Party, purportedl­y set up as a vehicle for him to enter the next election.

Last week, the Prime Minister told local media that he was “still considerin­g” the move. — The Straits Times/ann

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