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These are the three types of proportional representation B.C. is considering

Making sense of referendum to change provincial voting system
prop-rep
Ballots start going out to households this week asking whether B.C. should switch from the current first-past-the-post election system to a system of proportional representation. The second question asks voters to rank three systems of proportional representation. (via Dan Toulgoet)

Just when you thought we were done with voting, the ballots in B.C.’s referendum on electoral reform will start going out to households across the province this week. But what exactly are we being asked to vote on?

The ballot will include two questions — the first will ask whether B.C. should switch from the current first-past-the-post election system to a system of proportional representation; the second question asks voters to rank three systems of proportional representation.

So, what is proportional representation and how does it work? The Courier spoke to Richard Johnston, a political science professor at the University of British Columbia.

“The basic idea is that the entitlement of a party to a number of seats in the parliament or legislature should be as closely proportional to its share of the popular vote as arithmetically possible,” he said. “That’s it.”

The principal is simple. It’s in the execution where things can get complicated.

We should also note this isn’t the first time B.C. voters have been asked about switching from the current first-past-the-post electoral system to a form of proportional representation — referendums in 2005 and 2009 were both defeated.

This referendum is asking voters who are in favour of moving to proportional representation to rank three proposed systems — mixed member proportional, dual member proportional and rural-urban proportional.

Mixed Member Proportional (MMP)

MMP was first invented for use in Germany in 1949, but it is also the system currently used in New Zealand, Scotland and Wales.

The system divides MLAs into two tiers — local and regional. Local MLAs would be elected as they are now. Voters cast a ballot for the candidate they would like to see represent the constituency, and the candidate with the most votes wins that seat. However, residents then cast a second vote for a regional representative. It’s the second vote that determines what the overall share of seats each party is entitled to.

“So if a party gets 40 per cent of the votes cast, then it will get 40 per cent of the seats, to an approximation,” Johnston said.

Any seats that are won at the local level are awarded and subtracted from the overall total. The regional seats are then allocated based on each party’s percentage of that vote.

“So some parties will get a small top up, some parties will get a bigger top up, other parties may get seats only through the higher tier, but the total number of seats will be a number that is broadly proportional,” Johnston said.

He added, “It’s an attempt to have local representation mesh with an overall proportional result.”

Dual Member Proportional (DMP)

This system was designed in 2013 by Sean Graham, a civil servant in Alberta. It’s not in use anywhere but was one of several electoral systems proposed in a 2016 plebiscite in PEI.

“From a representational point of view, it’s kind of interesting, kind of smart, but it’s very hard to describe,” Johnston said.

With DMP, almost every riding would elect two representatives. Most of the province’s electoral ridings would be amalgamated with a neighbouring constituency to create larger two-member districts. The largest rural districts would likely remain unchanged — parties would run a single candidate and the candidate with the most votes would win the seat.

In the amalgamated ridings, each party would nominate up to two candidates to run in each riding and then designates its number one candidate and which will be number two. On election day, voters cast a single vote for the party, not the individual candidates, and the number one candidate for the party that finishes first gets one seat.

“At this point, half the seats in the house are assigned,” Johnston said. “Then a counting mechanism is set in (motion) to assign the other half.”

The second seats are then allocated to ensure each party’s share of seats is roughly the same as its share of the popular vote province-wide, needing at least five per cent of the vote to get any second seats.

Rural-Urban Proportional (RUP)

Johnston said this system “attempts to address straight up what is in some ways a big rhetorical problem for proportional representation in a place like British Columbia, which is that B.C. is vast and mostly empty.”

“They’re trying to preserve some semblance of the existing constituency makeup of the low-density part of the province,” he said.

RUP would combine two proportional systems — MMP and the Single Transferable Vote (STV) system.

“The low-density parts of the province, basically the interior and the north, you would essentially have MMP — individual constituencies and then an upper tier of (representatives) selected by basically the same system as described in MMP,” Johnston said.

In the rest of the province, where there are a lot of people but not a lot of turf, ridings would be bundled into larger, multi-member districts and MLAs would be elected using STV.

STV was the electoral method proposed by the B.C. Citizens Assembly and was included in the 2005 and 2009 referendums. It uses a preferential ballot where voters rank their preferred candidates on the ballot.

With STV, the counting of the ballots is more complicated, Johnston said, but it is already in use in Ireland, the Australian senate and in Malta. It usually requires several rounds of counting.

Each riding would have a minimum number of votes needed to win a seat. Any candidate that reaches the quota is elected. If that candidate has more than the required number of votes, the extra votes are transferred to the other candidates based on the voter’s rankings. The candidates with the fewest number of votes are dropped and those votes are also transferred to the remaining candidates using the voter’s next choice.

Voting packages are set start arriving in mailboxes across the province between Oct. 22 and Nov. 2. Completed ballots must be returned to Elections B.C. by 4:30 p.m. on Nov. 30.

Anyone who does not receive a package by Nov. 2 can request one by calling Elections B.C. at 1-800-661-8683 or online at elections.bc.ca/ovr. The deadline to request a voting package is Nov. 23.

For more information about the referendum, visit elections.bc.ca/referendum

The ballots are set to hit Kamloops mailboxes on Oct. 24. For Prince George, they'll be there Oct. 25. 

— Jessica Kerr, Vancouver Courier