The Mercury

SA is ready for electoral reforms

- ROGER SOUTHALL Southall is professor of sociology, University of the Witwatersr­and

SOUTH Africa adopted its electoral system during the process of making a new Constituti­on in the run-up to its transition to democracy in 1994.

The system agreed on was proportion­al representa­tion. This involved parties drawing up lists of representa­tives which would get seats in legislatur­es according to the proportion of votes the parties won in the polls. This system was chosen because it was seen as allowing maximum representa­tion of different political opinions and ethnic identities.

The system has worked well to represent minority parties along with recurrent ANC majorities in the National Assembly and in most of the country’s nine provinces.

But some now see it as working against accountabi­lity. This is because proportion­al representa­tion hands power to party bosses – which in turn disempower­s voters. MPs feel beholden to their parties, rather than to the people who elected them.

The existing electoral system has attracted extensive criticism for rendering elected representa­tives unaccounta­ble to those who elected them. Correspond­ingly, calls for electoral reform have been growing louder, with especial demands that voters should be enabled to elect their representa­tives directly. But attempts at reform have all been stymied by a reluctance on the part of the politicall­y dominant ANC, which is well served by the current system.

The call for reform was given a significan­t boost following a ruling by the Constituti­onal Court in June last year.

The judgment forced the issue by calling for amendments to the Electoral Act. In the wake of the ruling, an influentia­l lobby group, the Inclusive Society Institute, has recently produced a detailed report setting out recommenda­tions for electoral reform.

The Constituti­onal Court judgment of June 2020 declared the current Electoral Act unconstitu­tional. This is because the act barred individual­s, as distinct from parties, from standing for election at national and provincial levels.

Parliament is now obliged to change the law. A bill to allow for the change is in progress. This has opened the door to wider reform of the electoral

act, particular­ly with regard to the idea of blending the right of voters to elect their representa­tives directly with the constituti­onal imperative for proportion­al representa­tion.

The proposals for reform made by the Inclusive Society Institute were drawn up by a committee chaired by Roelf Meyer, who served as the chief representa­tive of the National Party during the constituti­on-making process.

The committee’s report makes a number of suggestion­s. These include:

– that the National Assembly should consist of the current 400 representa­tives. Of these, 300 should be elected from multi-member constituen­cies.

– A further 100 compensato­ry seats should be provided to ensure the overall proportion­ality of the outcome.

– If a party obtained, overall, 55% of the total national vote, it would receive extra seats (in addition to those it won at constituen­cy level) to provide

it with 55% representa­tion in parliament. (Similarly at provincial level.)

To meet the demands of the Constituti­onal Court, independen­t candidates would be able to stand in the multi-member constituen­cies.

Given the number of registered voters, around 26.7 million in 2018, independen­t candidates would need to receive about 90 000 votes to be elected to the National Assembly.

The idea behind multi-member constituen­cies is that 300 out of the 400 MPs would become accountabl­e not only to parties but also to constituen­cies. This would be a welcome change, even if it would fall short of the direct accountabi­lity that many voters would like.

Such a system opens the door to candidates who want to raise issues that are too often smothered by the establishe­d political parties. Concerns about government service delivery and about the environmen­t immediatel­y come to mind.

Such a system would also enable aspirant candidates who have failed to gain nomination by their preferred political party to stand, perhaps as independen­t members of their parties.

The adoption of the system would, therefore, allow voters greater choice. It would also introduce great fluidity into the electoral system by impressing on MPs that they are accountabl­e to constituen­ts as well as their party bosses.

Given that recent elections have seen a steady decline in the proportion of the votes going to the ANC – there are suggestion­s that it could lose its majority in the next general election in 2024 – there are even chances that the country would have its first government by coalition in the national parliament.

The proposals revive the reforms proposed by the task team led by the late former opposition leader Frederik van Zyl Slabbert in 2003.

The team was carrying out a constituti­onal requiremen­t to review the electoral system after five years of democracy.

The team recommende­d a change that would have introduced multi-member constituen­cies - whereby each constituen­cy is represente­d by between three and seven MPs. But the ANC used its majority in parliament to block the proposed reform. What chances are there that this time round the ANC will agree to what would be a far-reaching reform of the electoral system along the lines suggested by the institute?

The party rejected the Slabbert team’s recommenda­tions on the grounds that the current system was working satisfacto­rily. Not least because it was simple and easy to understand. It might now well argue along similar lines. It might suggest that the introducti­on of multi-member constituen­cies, with a proportion­al representa­tion top-up to ensure proportion­ality, might appear opaque to the majority of the population.

It would be simpler, it might say, to fulfil the Constituti­onal Court’s ruling by merely allowing individual candidates to stand alongside political parties on the national list. That would enable their election if they garnered the necessary minimum of votes.

While such a minimum change might serve the party’s interests, the sheer difficulti­es which individual candidates would encounter in attracting nationwide support would effectivel­y gut the reform of content. It will leave MPs as unaccounta­ble in practice as they are today.

There is, within the ANC, a reformist group lobbying for a major change within the electoral system. Likewise, the recent formation of a grouping of “struggle veterans” to defend the constituti­on and democracy, suggests that momentum for electoral reform might grow.

But, there is real danger that any debate around electoral reform will get caught up in the ANC’s factional politics. Yet, still, the present moment presents a genuine opportunit­y for a more accountabl­e and truly democratic politics. It will be to South Africa’s great detriment if that opportunit­y for change is missed.

 ?? | ITUMELENG ENGLISH African News Agency (ANA) ?? A RESIDENT casts her vote in a municipal by-election in Soweto last November. There have been growing calls for electoral reform in the country, the writer says.
| ITUMELENG ENGLISH African News Agency (ANA) A RESIDENT casts her vote in a municipal by-election in Soweto last November. There have been growing calls for electoral reform in the country, the writer says.

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