For and against referendums
professor of public policy in the School of Government at Victoria University of Wellington mechanism through which the public can express its will. In so doing, it is claimed, referendums foster a more informed, engaged, and active citizenry.
Second, there is a more specific ‘‘constitutional case’’. According to this argument, elected representatives should not decide significant constitutional matters, such as the electoral rules. This is because MPs have a vested interest in the rules of the game. Partisan considerations may thus trump the public interest.
The ‘‘constitutional case’’ for referendums makes sense. Letting MPs decide, for instance, how they are elected or for how long they serve is risky.
But the broader ‘‘democratic case’’ for referendums is much less compelling.
Most policy issues are complex and multifaceted. They cannot be reduced to a simple binary question or even a series of binary questions.
Take the matter of voluntary euthanasia. The issue is not merely whether euthanasia should be legalised. Also important is the regulatory framework governing its conduct. What criteria must be satisfied? Who should have a right to prescribe and administer lethal injections? Should close relatives be consulted? And what safeguards should there be?
Such issues are complicated and often controversial. They require detailed analysis, a careful weighing of the evidence, and informed deliberation. Representative institutions are designed to facilitate and encourage such processes. Referendums are not.
Further, reducing complex issues to a mere ‘‘yes’’ or ‘‘no’’ is not only simplistic, it can also be highly misleading.
Consider the 2016 referendum on Britain’s continued membership of the European Union. It was reasonably clear what ‘‘remain’’ meant, but what did ‘‘leave’’ mean? It is doubtful whether many of the 52 per cent who voted to leave had much idea. And those who promoted leaving had multiple and competing visions, as has become painfully obvious.
Predictably, there is now an almighty mess. Repeating banal slogans like ‘‘Brexit means Brexit’’ solves nothing.
Referendums face other objections. The outcome can depend on many factors that have little to do with actual issues at stake. These include how the referendum question is worded, when the vote occurs, the popularity or otherwise of the government, the rules under which the issues are debated, the threshold for success, and the turnout. Moreover, public opinion can be volatile and easily manipulated.
This highlights a further point: the ‘‘democratic case’’ for referendums often assumes that democratic legitimacy can be reduced to securing bare majorities on binary questions.
But surely this is not enough. A robust and genuinely deliberative democracy – one which values truth, evidence, fairness, integrity, and informed consent – also requires carefully crafted rules to govern the processes by which debates and voting occur. Such rules must ensure that policy deliberations are open, fair, and honest, with well-designed limits on financing, expenditure, and advertising. Otherwise, people will not have confidence in the result.
In short, without proper rules, referendums risk undermining the democratic process.
With a flurry of referendums in prospect next year, we need to ask whether our current rules for such processes are fair and fit for purpose. More fundamentally, we need to question the case for relying on referendums to resolve complex policy issues. Other than for basic constitutional matters, they have little place.