Cape Argus

The SA electoral system: urgent need for change

Lack of accountabi­lity has exacerbate­d the political climate for corruption

- GEORGE DEVENISH ● George Devenish is an emeritus professor at the University of KZN and one of the scholars who assisted in drafting the interim constituti­on in 1993.

IT WAS reported last week that the Constituti­onal Court postponed a matter relating to the election nationally and provincial­ly of independen­t candidates until August 15 this year.

The New Nation Movement (NNM), involving Chantal Dawn and others, made an urgent applicatio­n to the apex court to hear their submission­s requesting it to set aside as unconstitu­tional and invalid the Electoral Act’s defect to make provision and regulate for individual candidates to stand for national and provincial elections.

The parties were appealing a decision of the Western Cape High Court last month which dismissed a similar case.

The Concourt found that the applicants had failed to show urgency in the matter and consequent­ly the case as to whether South Africans have a right to seek election in national and provincial legislatur­es as candidates independen­t from party politics.

The basis for the applicants’ constituti­onal and legal argument was that the proportion­al electoral system was not free and fair because it excluded independen­t candidates.

Although counsel for the respondent, the government and the Independen­t Electoral Commission (IEC) argued that the applicatio­n was not in the interest of justice, they agreed it could be postponed until August as close to 45 million have an interest in elections taking place timeously.

On Wednesday, the electorate will be voting in national and provincial spheres of government.

The nature of the electoral system is a vital issue in relation to democracy and free and fair elections and the NNM applicatio­n necessitat­es that the system be examined carefully to determine whether it is fit for purpose or whether there is a need for a change in general, not only whether provision should be made for independen­t candidates not provided for at present.

Section 46 of the Constituti­on deals with the nature of the electoral system that must be used for the electing members of the National Assembly. It requires that such an electoral system must be:

(a) Prescribed by national legislatio­n.

(d) One that results in general in proportion­al representa­tion (PR).

Section 105 is the correspond­ing provision relating to the election of members of the nine provincial legislatur­es.

South Africa in accordance with the existing Electoral Act, 202 of 193, employs a closed-list PR system.

In this system, the different political parties each submit lists of individual­s to be elected as members of the national and provincial legislatur­es. One of its advantages, besides the strict proportion­ality that it produces, lies in its simplicity, as voters only cast a single vote in relation to National Assembly and another single vote for the relevant provincial legislatur­e.

However, it has a very serious defect in that the voters do not have the power to determine who is or is not on respective party lists, but instead must vote for a political party of their choice, regardless of the dissatisfa­ction they may have of certain individual­s on a particular list or lists in question.

Great displeasur­e has been expressed about a fair number of persons on the ANC lists because of their alleged serious misbehavio­ur.

In effect the present system has the unfortunat­e result that those elected to the respective legislatur­es are accountabl­e not to the voters but only to the political parties to which they belong, which placed them on the lists and ranked them on the relevant list.

This is most unsatisfac­tory from a democratic point of view, since voters are not able to have the power to determine the compositio­n of party lists or the ranking on such lists, but merely the power to choose which party to vote for, regardless of any serious reservatio­ns they may entertain concerning certain individual­s on the list in question.

This means that the manner in which our extant electoral system works does not give full expression to the will of the South African electorate.

Also, even if voters feel aggrieved by conduct of a parliament­arian, they have no power to remove such a person.

As explained such public representa­tives are not accountabl­e to the voters but to the political party to which they belong.

This flows from section 47(3) (b) of the Constituti­on which states that “(a) person loses membership of the National Assembly if that person… ceases to be a member of the party that nominated that person as a member…

This means that should an MP or MLA incur the wrath of his or her party, they can be deprived of membership of the party concerned and then automatica­lly cease to be a public representa­tive.

This is manifestly undemocrat­ic and in conflict with the values set out in section 1 of the Constituti­on, which requires regular elections in a system of democratic government to ensure “accountabi­lity, responsive­ness and openness”.

Since, in principle, it was generally acknowledg­ed that a Parliament whose members are directly accountabl­e to the electorate of their constituen­cies is likely to be more responsive than a situation where members are accountabl­e only to the leadership of their individual parties, a commission of inquiry chaired by the late Frederick Van Zyl Slabbert was appointed to investigat­e and report on the electoral system. Although this commission made both majority and minority recommenda­tions, it was not acted on and in effect has been shelved.

The reason for this is that there is a manifest lack of political will, particular­ly on the part of the governing ANC party, to make the National Assembly and provincial legislatur­es more accountabl­e and responsive to the people through the kind of electoral system recommende­d by the majority in the Van Zyl Slabbert commission.

It recommende­d a mixed system, premised on the tried and tested German model.

This is known as the additional member system, which is a mixed one that preserves the principles of proportion­ality in general but introduces a significan­t measure of accountabi­lity to the electorate through constituen­cies that elect representa­tives directly.

There is an urgent need for such a change, since the lack of accountabi­lity and responsive­ness in the working of the existing electoral system has, it is submitted, exacerbate­d the political climate for corruption and maladminis­tration that escalated exponentia­lly during the era of the Zuma presidency.

Changing the electoral system to institute a hybrid would provide for independen­t candidates, as long as it complied with the requiremen­t resulting “in general, in proportion­al representa­tion”.

This would not require an amendment to the Constituti­on but merely an amendment of the Electoral Act of 1993.

This is exactly what was recommende­d by the majority in the report of the Van Zyl Slabbert commission.

In the interest of democratic accountabi­lity and not only for making provision for independen­t candidates, this crucial issue needs to be very seriously considered and indeed put into effect for future elections.

The manner in which the electoral system works does not give full expression to the will of the electorate

 ??  ?? SOUTH Africa is poised to go to the polls in a general election, but the author argues the electoral system is far from ideal. | AP
SOUTH Africa is poised to go to the polls in a general election, but the author argues the electoral system is far from ideal. | AP

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