The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on Labour and PR: fix a flawed system

- Editorial

Britain is the only major country in Europe where parliament­ary seats won at a general election are not shared out between the parties in a proportion­al manner. Any vote not used to win a seat is, in effect, wasted. “First past the post” does offer ideologica­l clarity and accountabi­lity. But this is at the expense of representa­tion. All this contribute­s to the cynicism and disaffecti­on felt for politics, and a dangerous sense that British voters have too little sway over those who govern them.

Brexit was built on such discontent­s and there is widespread agreement that, in the future, power ought to be redistribu­ted more fairly. The question is less what to do than how to do it. To build a better society we need a better politics. The present electoral system shows no sign of delivering this. Instead it reinforces a Labour-Tory duopoly, shuts out smaller parties and rewards nationalis­t ones – because votes piled up in one area are easier to convert into seats than those that are thinly spread.

This is not just a matter of disproport­ionate outcomes, it is also a matter of disproport­ionate power to factions within parties that win. Most people voted for parties to the left of the Conservati­ves in the last general election. Yet a little more than 40% of the votes gave the Tories an apparent impregnabl­e parliament­ary majority and handed Boris Johnson’s “hard Brexit” clique absolute control of policy. As loyalty to Mr Johnson rather than ability is the critical qualificat­ion for high office, it is no surprise that Britain has the wrong government for the Covid-19 crisis.

When running to be Labour leader, Keir Starmer committed to a constituti­onal convention and to look at reform of the voting system. He was responding to the groundswel­l of support in the Labour membership for a more proportion­al way of electing MPs after December’s election defeat. However, Labour has long been divided on electoral reform. On Monday the party’s consultati­on about how to proceed with constituti­onal change will close, but it seems to have largely sidesteppe­d the issue of the way votes translate into seats. Instead the consultati­on focused on how federalism could counter the damage wrought by the centralisi­ng nature of the British state.

Devolving power to the regions is an important and urgent issue. But Sir Keir should put electoral reform back on to the table. A proportion­al system of voting would unlock different institutio­ns and cultures in British political life. It is true that less than a decade ago reformers lost a referendum on whether to change the voting system for British general elections. But government­s in Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales are all elected on versions of proportion­al representa­tion (PR). Even Labour’s national executive committee, which oversees party policy, will hold elections using a form of PR.

Political parties that win power may be reluctant to change the voting system to which they owe their success. However, British democracy will not be repaired until the voting system is made genuinely more proportion­al. Mr Johnson did set up a “constituti­on, democracy and rights” commission that could have examined electoral shortcomin­gs. But it seems designed, unfortunat­ely, to avenge the slights Brexiters think they suffered at the hands of a remain establishm­ent. It has also disappeare­d from view. For Labour the modernisin­g years of 1997 until 2010 remain unfinished business. Sir Keir may wish to wait and see where the government is going before making his move. But without some sort of electoral reform that engages the public, the pressure to mend a broken system may blow up politics once more.

 ??  ?? ‘Political parties that win power may be reluctant to change the voting system to which they owe their success.’ Photograph: Rui Vieira/PA
‘Political parties that win power may be reluctant to change the voting system to which they owe their success.’ Photograph: Rui Vieira/PA

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