The Citizen (Gauteng)

Call for electoral reform

APATHY: DO AWAY WITH PROPORTION­AL REPRESENTA­TION, SAYS ANALYST

- Eric Naki – ericn@citizen.co.za

System needed where voters vote for individual­s instead of the party.

Asystem where voters would vote directly for the nation’s president and their public representa­tives would curb the current ongoing voter apathy in South Africa caused by politician­s’ lack of accountabi­lity.

said it was becoming clear that people had enough of the proportion­al representa­tion (PR) system as it brought them leaders that were not accountabl­e.

Former president Jacob Zuma is always cited as the worst case of the PR system as he was not directly elected by people.

Zuma was more a project of a disgruntle­d faction of the ANC’s national executive committee elected at Polokwane in 2007 that was opposed to then president Thabo Mbeki rather than a popular choice of the party membership and the citizenry.

Under the PR system, which came into being as a result of the compromise­s reached during the pre-1994 Kempton Park constituti­on talks, the electorate vote for a political party which in turn elects a president among its elected representa­tives.

After being elected through a vote in parliament, the president-elect would then resign their member of parliament (MP) post in terms of the constituti­on that required that the president of the republic must not be an MP.

Naidu said the current situation where majority of the electorate tended to stay away from the polls after the historic 1994 democratic elections, justified the need for the reformatio­n of the current electoral system to make it more democratic.

“There is a strong case for electoral reform so that people can vote directly for the president,” she said.

“Not that people wanted to continue voting for a political party but they do so because the electoral system says so. People don’t want to continue voting for the same ANC or any other party for that matter, but our system is set in a way that you must exercise your democratic right to vote through a political party even if you don’t want.”

The PR system had caused disgruntle­ment among voters because they had no say in who should represent them as this task was in the hands of the party.

In order to curb disgruntle­ment and resultant voter apathy, Naidu suggested that there should be a system where voters would be able to vote for individual­s instead of the party.

The constituen­cy system is partly practised at local government where ward councillor­s were directly elected by voters. But at both national and provincial levels, the PR system applied, leaving the party to deploy MPs and MPLs to parliament and the provincial legislatur­es.

Once elected, the parliament­arians and the president account to the party that deployed them instead of the electorate.

According to Naidu, the constituen­cy system was more ideal for democracy because it allowed people to have a say. They would have power to recall the elected representa­tive if they were unhappy with their performanc­e.

“There should be a way of voting for candidates instead of a party,” she said. “It means that in the mix you could have independen­ts coming in.”

The proposal by the Frederick van Zyl Slabbert commission for a constituen­cy system was shelved but Naidu questioned why it wasn’t popular, even among the opposition parties.

“There was a proposal but I do not know why it didn’t get any traction. But I think it’s the way that first-past-the-post system works which some enjoy,” she said.

Naidu said in some of the political parties, there were leaders who were more popular than their parties. She cited the case of President Cyril Ramaphosa, whom most surveys showed him to be more liked by the people than the ANC itself.

Naidu highlighte­d the fact that most parties were patriarcha­l with the top leadership dominated by males. She cited the top three – the ANC, DA and EFF as examples of male dominated parties.

The EFF was dominated by its leader Julius Malema, his deputy Floyd Shivambu, and chairperso­n Dali Mpofu, but its female leaders remained obscure, although a few were in the national command team, the party’s top brass. Similarly, the DA had a male-strong leadership, although the party had its own tension caught by a fight for dominance between the black and white sections of the leadership.

I think it’s the way that firstpast-the-post system works.

 ?? Picture: Refilwe Modise ?? POSTER POWER. The DA came out with guns blazing yesterday in Johannesbu­rg with a campaign billboard taking a swipe at the governing ANC.
Picture: Refilwe Modise POSTER POWER. The DA came out with guns blazing yesterday in Johannesbu­rg with a campaign billboard taking a swipe at the governing ANC.

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