Paul Anderson

AV is worse than first past the post

by Paul Anderson
Sunday, March 20th, 2011

The week before last, Tribune published a letter from Terry Ashton, one-time general secretary of the London Labour Party, arguing that my last column had not substantiated my claim that the alternative vote is worse than first past the post for parliamentary elections. I know it’s not done for columnists to abuse their privileged position to take issue with letters to the editor, but what the hell – this one needs to be thrashed out.

My starting point is that the main problem with first past the post is that it is not proportional. It is based entirely on single-member constituencies and has no mechanism to ensure that the share of parliamentary seats won by parties reflects their overall level of support.

Indeed, in most general elections of the past 80 years, FPTP has yielded spectacularly disproportionate results, the beneficiaries being the Conservative and Labour parties and the losers the Liberals (and their successors) and other smaller parties.

At the 2010 general election, the Conservative Party won 36 per cent of the vote, but 47 per cent of House of Commons seats. Labour won 29 per cent of the vote but 40 per cent of seats and the Liberal Democrats won 23 per cent of the vote and only 9 per cent of seats. In five out of the last eight general elections – 1979, 1983, 1987, 1997 and 2001 – parties have won landslide Commons majorities on much less than half the vote.

Now, proportionality is not the only criterion by which electoral systems can be judged – and supporters of first past the post argue that its main strengths are precisely a function of its disproportionality, that it usually delivers clear victories for either Labour or the Tories and that it tends to prevent extremists from gaining a foothold in parliament. Post-election haggling over coalition arrangements is the exception rather than the norm under FPTP, they say, and the disproportionality of the Lib Dems’ representation excludes them from undue influence as perpetual kingmakers.

As it happens, I believe that the benefits of proportionality – both in giving legitimacy to the electoral system and in allowing relatively easy development of new parties – would outweigh the supposed disadvantages.

But this is irrelevant in the context of the May 5 referendum. The referendum gives us a straight choice between AV and FPTP; and, despite the claims of some of its proponents, AV is neither a proportional system, nor a “more” proportional system than FPTP, nor a step towards a more proportional system. AV is simply preferential voting in single-member constituencies. Voters mark their ballots “1, 2, 3, 4 …” instead of “X”; if no candidate wins more than 50 per cent of first preferences, the second preferences of the last placed candidate are distributed, and so on until one candidate reaches 50 per cent.

So what makes AV worse than FPTP? Advocates of AV say that it has the advantage of ensuring that every MP is elected with 50 per cent or more of the vote – but it also turns electioneering into a desperate battle for the second, third and fourth preferences of fringe candidates. It eliminates tactical voting in the sense that it makes it unnecessary for voters to make considered choices between voting for someone they want and voting for someone with a chance of winning – but it does so only by allowing some voters more than one bite of the cherry.

The worst problem with AV, however, is that it in the long term it would probably be even less proportional and even less conducive to pluralism than FPTP. No one can know precisely what its effects would be in Britain – and guesswork based on recent general elections has been rendered obsolete by the Lib Dems’ entry into government with the Tories. But the 90-year experience of Australia suggests that AV has even more of a tendency than FPTP to force politics into a de facto two-party mode.

In Australia, elections for the lower house of parliament, the House of Representatives, are a stand-off between the centre-left Labor Party and a permanent conservative coalition of the Liberal and National parties (as they are now known). One reason the conservative coalition became permanent is a function of AV: each right-wing party needs the second preferences of supporters of the other to win seats – so each formally recommends that its supporters give their second preferences to the other to keep Labor out.

Parties outside these two blocs are more effectively excluded from the Australian House of Representatives than they are from the House of Commons. Partly because of this, landslide parliamentary majorities on minorities of first-preference votes are more common in Australia even than landslides for minority-supported parties under FPTP in Britain.

Of course, the disproportional effects of AV could be mitigated if it were used in conjunction with regional top-up seats, as recommended by Roy Jenkins’s Independent Commission on the Voting System in 1998. But “AV-plus” isn’t on offer on May 5 or at any time afterwards. Nor is what Australia has that Britain has not – an elected upper chamber with a quasi-proportional electoral system under which smaller parties have repeatedly won representation.

If we vote yes, we get AV pure and simple, without an elected second chamber, and we get it for keeps. And, even though it puts me in the same camp as the dreadful David Owen on an important issue for the first time in 40 years, that’s why I’m voting “No to AV” – because I want PR”.

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About The Author

Paul Anderson was editor of Tribune from 1991-1993. He now teaches journalism at City University London
  • Jim M.

    I am a staffer for one of the minor political parties in Australia, and I can say that your above explanation of the AV’s impact on coalition governments here is nonsense.

    The conservative coalition was not at all a result of the Alternative Vote, and members of the coalition do not preference each other at all, because (in most circumstances) there is an agreement that Liberals will not stand in Nationals seats, and vice versa. The coalition occurred because rural electorates were traditionally dominated by the “Country Party” (now the Nationals), but that party never stood in urban electorates because of its rural focus. The Liberal Party knew it had no chance to compete with the Country Party in rural areas, so it stayed out. Both parties were of a conservative bent, so when they had the numbers, they would form a conservative coalition government, and that coalition became permanent, and the agreement between the parties essentially merged them (a process that has been formalised in Queensland).

    The reason for the coalition is purely geographical, a by-product of Australia’s rural/urban polarisation, and has absolutely nothing to do with the voting system used.

    The real reason for two-party domination in Australia is because of the concentration of the media here. Election advertising is expensive, with newspapers dominated by two empires, and television advertising being an expensive and daunting proposition. On top of that, the media essentially ignores the minor parties, often taking a partisan position and actively barracking for one of the two sides. Trying to get the message out without the backing of a major party machine has been impossible.

    That has all changed with the arrival of “new media”. Campaigns can be orchestrated on the internet, which has played a large part in the Greens getting the numbers to form part of the current progressive coalition government.

    And thank heavens for the Alternative Vote. Without it, the fledgling minor parties would have a much harder task in convincing people that their vote isn’t wasted if they cast it for someone other than the big two.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=651416671 Alex Hosking

    “but it does so only by allowing some voters more than one bite of the cherry.” No, you wouldn’t be saying that if we had a separate run-off election would you?

  • http://twitter.com/Untidy_mind Alex Wasyliw

    Two bites of the cherry?

    Are you saying that in additional rounds of counting, people’s first preference votes for remaining candidates are somehow magically not still being counted for those candidates (if you are that shows a severe lack of understanding of how the system works). Or are you saying that those whose votes remain with their first preferences should get the chance to transfer their vote to someone they support less? Which makes no sense when you are trying to find the candidate with the most support.

    This whole bites of the cherry thing is a completely misleading metaphor, trying to elect an MP is not pecking away at a piece of fruit until there is nothing left, and even if it were the voters whose candidates have been eliminated are only getting another bite after those whose first preferences remain have had already taken a second bite of the juicier parts that remain.

    “One reason the conservative coalition became permanent is a function of AV: each right-wing party needs the second preferences of supporters of the other to win seats – so each formally recommends that its supporters give their second preferences to the other to keep Labor out.”

    So you end up with people who have a certain view (i.e. right-wing), supporting all of the right wing candidates in their area? … umm, and? This is what AV is meant to do, allow you to support all the canddiates whose views align with yours above those whose don’t. A right wing candidate will still only be elected if a larger number of people have a right wing view than have a left wing one. If more people had a left wing view and supported all the left wing candidates then a left wing candidate would win. All you are saying is that Australia is, generally, more right wing by nature, and has remained so for a long enough while that right wing coalitions have become the norm. Were they to have FPTP then all the right wing voters would still vote a right wing candidate, the only difference being that a left wing candidate might win based on a minority of the vote if their rivals votes were split between the various right wing candidates, you think this would be better for democracy? And of course eventually they would end up with only one right wing party running/winning in each area, which gives the voters even less choice, and the parties even less incentive to bother with their voters wishes, as they know they have no alternative unless they want a left wing candidate to win.

    The point is, that AV doesn’t influence the demographic of the house (left or right wing), it is the views of the voters that do this… as it should be. All AV does is give the chance for difference candidates who share similar views to run together and provide a bit of competition. If an area is predominantly right wing, then a single member voting system should never return an MP that isn’t in line with those views unless those views themselves change.

    Of course, with AV each party can run it’s own campaign based on their similarities and their differences, as peoples views start to differ, then the party that most represents those views, and that listens to them will start to win out over the one which doesn’t… leading to a gradual evolution of a party. This leads to a less severe form of competition between similarly aligned parties as well as those with diametrically opposed views.

    Under FPTP, once the choice of candidate has effectively been reduced to one for any particular political leaning in any given area, there is much less incentive/impetus for that party to evolve and change… leading to another form of political stagnation, intra-party stagnation.

  • Anonymous

    When do you expect to get the vote for PR ? This is a once in a lifetime opportunity to improve the system of voting in the uk. When was the last vote on reform ?

    Vote for AV as an immense improvement on FPTP.

    FPTP is simply flawed in that it does not represent the votes of the people.

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