SOUND OFF: Rothenburger’s latest proportionality rant based on misinformation
IT’S A NEW YEAR, but Mel Rothenburger keeps issuing the same old bad takes on proportional representation. The latest one is somewhat more bizarre than others: suggesting that the political cesspool south of our border can provide insight into proportional representation is like suggesting we can learn about the Arctic by visiting Costa Rica.
Apart from his tightly clutched misconceptions about proportional representation, Mel is apparently labouring under the mistaken belief that Canada’s parliament uses first-past-the-post to elect our speaker. Wrong-o! As in the U.S., Canadian law requires a majority in the House of Commons to elect a speaker. In fact, we use a ranked ballot to do so, which speeds up the voting process (it’s a nice touch ― the Americans might want to look into that). Wikipedia helpfully points out that our current speaker, Anthony Rota, was elected as the 37th speaker on December 5, 2019, by winning a ranked ballot contest between himself and five others.
Contrary to Mel’s fearmongering, countries using proportional representation consistently top the lists of the best-governed countries, as found by the Global State of Democracy Effective Parliament Index (compares the ability of parliament to oversee the prime minister and cabinet across 165 countries) as well as the World Governance Indicators Project (compares 200 countries on six dimensions of governance).
Instead of being mired in conflict and endless negotiation, countries using proportional systems manage to get more done, too. During a one-year period from March 2020 to February 2021, Denmark’s multi-party coalition government passed 250 pieces of legislation. Canada? A paltry 16, despite the temporary love-in between the parties at the beginning of the pandemic.