90 Members of Parliament(MPs), victorious in the last General Elections, did not have the support of the majority of voters in their constituency that voted.
In fact, the number of voters that did not choose them to be their MP was MORE than the number of voters that chose them for their MP?
So not even the support of 50% of the voters in their constituency...they won simply because of the 'first past the post' system...(read the article below).
In fact, the number of voters that did not choose them to be their MP was MORE than the number of voters that chose them for their MP?
So not even the support of 50% of the voters in their constituency...they won simply because of the 'first past the post' system...(read the article below).
BASED on the GE14 result, there are 77 MP seats in Peninsular Malaysia and 13 MP seats in Sabah and Sarawak that did not return a majority winner.
SO, you are a MP but you do not even have the support of majority or 50% plus 1 of the voters in your own constituency?
Example - Let’s take the Jerlun parliamentary seat won by Parti Pribumi Bersatu deputy president Datuk Seri Mukhriz Mahathir as an example.
Mukhriz got 18,695 votes, Abdul Ghani Ahmad of PAS 12,829 votes and Othman Aziz 12,413. He won the seat with a 5,866 majority.However, more voters did not vote for the Kedah Menteri Besar than those who voted for him. If you add PAS and Umno votes (25,242) and minus with the Pakatan Harapan votes (18,695), 6,549 more voters did not vote for him.
Now, in many constituencies parties may have lost because their candidate did not secure the highest number of votes BUT many people supported them. So, Party A who may have contested in many seats all over Malaysia at the end of the day may have secured 20% of the popular vote( total votes cast all over Malaysia) - should that party be given some seats in parliament?
We today have 222 Parliamentary Constituencies. What we add another 100 seats that will be allocated based of the total percentage of popular vote the party received all over the country, whether they won or lost, this will mean that Party A will get now 20 MPs
KUALA LUMPUR: The newly-concluded 14th General Election (GE14) saw Pakatan Harapan’s (PH) dominance in popular votes of about 50 per cent, as was recorded in GE13.
Popular votes is the total number or percentage of votes received by a party.
The findings were based on the data of the number of votes garnered by three main parties contesting in the election. PH led the race with 5,685,252 votes, followed by Barisan Nasional (BN) 3,624,921 votes (or 32 percent); and PAS 2,043,159 votes (18 per cent)....New Straits Times, 10/5/2018
So, if we were to allocate 100 Parliamentary seats, then a party that gets 1% of the popular vote will get 1 MP in Parliament...and based on GE14 result, PH got 50% popular vote - it will get 50 additional MPs, BN will get 32 additional MPs and PAS an additional 18...
Would that not be more fair, as it will even enable small parties to have an MP in Parliament provided they get at least 1% of the popular vote?
Should there be Electoral Reform in Malaysia - we could keep the 'first past the post' system, and ADD ON AN ADDITIONAL 100 MPs - who will be be an MP based on the popular vote they obtained in the General Elections..
Think about it - we should be ready for change to adopt a better system ...
To reform or not to reform - It's Just Politics
Sunday, 2 Jun 2019
by philip golingai
Sunday, 2 Jun 2019
by philip golingai
BASED
on the GE14 result, there are 77 MP seats in Peninsular Malaysia and 13
MP seats in Sabah and Sarawak that did not return a majority winner.
Confused?
Let’s take the Jerlun parliamentary seat won by Parti Pribumi Bersatu
deputy president Datuk Seri Mukhriz Mahathir as an example.
Mukhriz got 18,695 votes, Abdul Ghani Ahmad of PAS 12,829 votes and Othman Aziz 12,413. He won the seat with a 5,866 majority.
However, more voters did not vote for the Kedah Menteri Besar than
those who voted for him. If you add PAS and Umno votes (25,242) and
minus with the Pakatan Harapan votes (18,695), 6,549 more voters did not
vote for him.
Mukhriz won because of the first-past-the-post (FPTP) electoral
system which we inherited from our colonial master, the British. He was
the first to past the post.
The MPs in the 90 parliamentary seats did not win with a majority as they had more opponents than supporters.
In the 77 seats which the MP did not win a majority in Peninsular
Malaysia, Barisan Nasional won 38, Pakatan 30 and PAS nine. If the Umno
and PAS votes were combined, Pakatan would have lost 30 MP seats.
“FPTP’s message to these MPs’ opponents is ‘unite if you don’t want
to lose’. As Pakatan won 30 of these seats because Umno and PAS were
split, Umno and PAS should now get united and close old ranks,” said
Wong Chin Huat, a senior fellow at Jeffery Sachs Center on Sustainable
Development, Sunway University.
“Umno and PAS need to whip up the sense of insecurity among the
Malays and make the non-Malays the bogeyman. This is not good for the
country,”
What Wong was saying was that to win Jerlun in GE15, Umno and PAS
needed to unite – form an electoral pact – and field one candidate
against Mukhriz to win the seat. He also contended that Umno and PAS
would be using anti-Malay rhetoric to win the voters.
If our electoral system were under MMP (member proportional system), Wong argued, the situation would not appear.
He’s a fan of Germany’s MMP. To incentivise political parties in
Malaysia towards becoming more moderate, he said, the country should
move the electoral system away from the “winner takes all” system. In
MMP, voters are given two ballots – one for their single-member
constituency representative (exactly like our FPTP) and one for their
desired party in a larger multi-member constituency (closed list PR).
“While the same problem may happen in the FPTP, most of the losers
will still get representation through party list where seats are
allocated proportionately based on percentages of party votes.
Hence,
parties do not feel compelled to form a bloc to block their common
enemies,” he said.
On Thursday, Wong and University of Western Australia’s political
science professor Ben Reilly, who is an internationally renowned
electoral system expert, spoke to journalists about the alternative
electoral system.
“With the MMP system, how would the general election result be different?” I asked Wong.
He said we need to look at two scenarios of GE15 using its voting
pattering: 1) replaying GE14 under MMP, and 2) replaying GE14 under FPTP
with Umno and PAS becoming a bloc (the very likely reality in GE15).
MMP, he said will produce highly proportional results like simple
List-PR so that we can use the latter as a substitute.
“Next, we assume that List-PR constituencies would be the states and
territories. Taking into account of disproportional allocation of
parliamentary seats, PH will fall short of 112 by a few seats, Barisan
will get about the same while PAS would increase its seats to around
35,” he said.
“On the surface, one would assume BN and PAS will form a coalition
government, but looking at how East Malaysian parties ditched Umno and
resisted PAS, the hung Parliament will likely lead to the breakup of BN
and a PH-led coalition with East Malaysian parties.”
In the second scenario, Wong said assuming Umno and PAS can keep and
converge their votes for common candidates, they will add 30 MP seats
(won if Umno and PAS fielded a single candidate) to 46 (Umno) + 18 (PAS)
= 94, exactly a bare majority in West Malaysia’s 165 seats. This means
the
next government will also be a post-coalition government.
“In both scenarios, there will be post-election governments. The main difference is whether Umno and PAS will form a pact.”
Wong contends that Malaysia needs to change the FPTP electoral system
because of four major problems which contribute to instability – as a
result of its mismatch with ethnic division in society.
1) It punishes losers heavily that every ethnic community craves communal unity and dreads division.
2) It suppresses non-communal divides like class and
environment-v-development, making ethnic and religious divisions always
salient in society.
3) by often weakening the opposition too much, it takes away the
prospect of winning power and leads them to prioritise segmental
popularity over governance and take hardline/populist positions on
communal issues. (Umno and PAS now playing ethno-religious issues is a
telling example).
4) It does not allow coalition members to compete because
constituencies are allocated on a near permanent basis and paradoxically
induces the ruling coalition into implosion when it wins too much and
does not have a formidable enemy to stay united.
Wong proposed for a mixed member proportional (MMP) system as can provide the solution for the four problems:
1) Ethno-religious communities can feel comfortable to split their support across a few parties.
2) Non-communal issues and parties like class inequality and
environment will gain representation in legislatures and hence reduce
the relevance of 3R.
3) The prospect of joining post-election governments may induce parties to be moderate.
4) Coalition partners can cooperate for FPTP as they do but at the
same time compete for party votes. This preserves the existing coalition
like PH and GPS for now but prepares them for a more open pattern of
coalition building in the wrong run.
I asked Wong, who is a member of the Electoral Reform Committee
(ERC), whether the ERC, Election Commission and political parties are
ready for a change in the electoral system.
ERC, he said, had organised town hall meetings in states but consultations with major parties have yet to take place.
“Most people believe that it would be difficult because of the need
for a constitutional amendment. But that is really ‘technical’ and can
be overcome with cross-party consensus,” he said.
Wong said cross-party consensus, in turn, hinges on two issues:
A) are most parties feeling uncertain of their luck in GE15 and
therefore prefer to hedge their risks (going for PR or propositional
representation) instead of continuing to gamble (keeping FPTP)
B) and will Malay-Muslims prefer to keep multiparty competition at a
lower cost (switching to PR) or to go for communal unity to minimise the
cost of political division (keeping FPTP)?
Reilly, however, pointed out that electoral reform is usually difficult to push through.
“This is because the government of the day is usually reluctant to
change the electoral system under which they won previously,” he said.
“Are Malaysians sophisticated enough for a new electoral system since
we are still stuck with issues such as 3Rs – religion, race and
royalty?” I asked Wong.
“Most people tend to misunderstand the causality in communal
politics. The salience of 3Rs is very much the consequence of our
failure to have non-communal divides and parties. So, the question is
not whether we are sophisticated enough to adopt a new electoral system,
but rather whether we want to adopt a new electoral system to be more
sophisticated,” he said.
Anyone for the MMP electoral system? - Star, 2/6/2019
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