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Constitutional choices Consensus v. majoritarian democracies

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  • Constitutional choices

    Consensus v. majoritarian democracies

  • Lijphart 2

    Policy Areasy

    Map ofMap of Program Options

    Constitutions IDEA

    Human rights, justice,

    rule_lawAmnesty

    Democratic governance

    ElectionsACE/UNDP

    Media freedom

    Amnesty

    governance UNDPIFES

    Parlt, tiCivic

    CPJ

    parties, womenQuotas Project

    PAR, decentralization, anti-corruption

    TI

    Civic society, soc

    capCIVICUS

    TI

  • Lijphart 3

    Class Structure

    I Lijpharts typology of types of I. Lijphart s typology of types of democracy

    II Majoritarian democracy II. Majoritarian democracy Case study of the UK May 2005 election

    III Consensus democracy III. Consensus democracy Case study of the Swiss 2003 election

    IV Discussion exercise IV. Discussion exercise What might be the arguments for adopting either type

    of democracy for new constitutions in Iraq, Af h i t S d d N l?Afghanistan, Sudan, and Nepal?

  • Lijphart 4

    Additional resources

    Pippa Norris Pippa Norris Driving Democracy (CUP 2008)

    www pippanorris com (under books)www.pippanorris.com (under books ) Comparative Constitutions Project

    http://netfiles uiuc edu/zelkins/constitutions http://netfiles.uiuc.edu/zelkins/constitutions

    International Constitutional Law DocumentsDocuments

    http://www.uni-wuerzburg.de/law/index.html

  • Lijphart 5

  • Lijphart 6

  • Lijphart 7

    Theoretical framework: Lijphartjp

    Arend Lijphart Arend Lijphart The Politics of Accommodation (1968) Democracy in Plural Society (1979) Democracy in Plural Society (1979) Democracies (1984) Electoral systems and party systems (1994)y p y y ( ) Institutional design in new democracies (1996) Patterns of Democracy (1999) Thinking about Democracy (2008)

  • Lijphart 8

    Why focus on constitutions?y

    Institutions can influence democratic governance e.g.

    Electoral rules have a mechanical impact on the number of parties in parliament and in governmentp p g

    Executive-legislative relations influences state capacity for effective governance

    Potential for practical political reforms e.g. Potential for practical political reforms e.g. Electoral reform in Italy, Japan, New Zealand, Venezuela Constitution-building in Bosnia, Cambodia, South Africa,

    Afghanistan, Iraq, Nepal, SudanAfghanistan, Iraq, Nepal, Sudan Peace-settlements in Bosnia-Herzegovina 1995, Kosovo

    2001, Northern Ireland 1998

  • Lijphart 9

    Constitutions

    Formal institutions Formal institutions Written constitutions, legal statutes,

    administrative decisions, executive decrees, judicial rulings, budgetary allocations

    Open to short-term political reform Informal institutions

    Norms, values and common practices which h d t i h b h ishape and constrain human behavior

    Open to long-term cultural evolution

  • Lijphart 10

    Stages of Institutional Reformg

    State building State building Post-conflict peace settlements

    E.g. Afghanistan constitution

    State reform Transition from autocracy

    Eg Choice of electoral system in post-Communist statesEg Choice of electoral system in post Communist states Common in established democracies

    Improving existing arrangements within a limited set of parameters/options p p

    eg UK green paper The Governance of Britain (2007)

  • Lijphart 11

    Consociational democracyy

    Lijphart (1968) The Politics of Accommodation Netherlands exemplified pillorized divided society Yet there was stable democracy and elite consensus Why? Constitutional arrangements Why? Constitutional arrangements

    Executive power-sharing/grand coalition Minority veto in government Proportional representation of all major groups in

    elected/appointed officeelected/appointed office Cultural autonomy for groups

    Model for other divided (plural) societies? E g Belgium Switzerland Lebanon Cyprus E.g.Belgium, Switzerland, Lebanon, Cyprus

  • Lijphart 12

    Normative valuesMajoritarian

    (Westminster) Consociational democracy( )democracy Goals

    government accountability

    democracy Goals

    consensual decision-making bargaining and government accountability

    and transparency of decision-making

    single-party executives,ff ti iti ti

    making, bargaining and compromise

    multiple parliamentary parties, each with a stake in coalition government and effective opposition parties,

    vigorous parliamentary debate, and

    decisive elections.

    coalition government, and dispersed decision-making

    processes. Yet dangers of decisive elections.

    Yet dangers of elective dictatorship, permanent majorities,

    g ineffective governance, extreme multiparty

    fragmentation, l k f t bilit lack of checks and

    balances. lack of accountability.

  • Lijphart 13The logical sequence of consociational theoryconsociational theory

    PR electoral systems or

    reserved seats

    Election ofethnic minority

    partiesPeaceful

    democratic consolidation

    Greater support within minority communities

    Plural societies

    Federalism & decentralization

    Election ofethnic minority

    parties

    Does the logic make sense? Criticisms?

  • Lijphart 14

    Potential criticisms?

    For constructivists, ethnic divisions have meanings gshaped by political structures and elites. Power-sharing regimes can thereby freeze/reinforce ethnic cleavages (Donald Horowitz)g

    Eg Bosnia-Herzegovina

    By contrast, majoritarian elections force vote-pooling across groups and bridging appeals (Ben Reilly)across groups and bridging appeals (Ben Reilly)

    Not the only outcome: some peace settlements are negotiated, others result from outright victoryM j it i l ti b ff ti i Majoritarian solutions may be more effective in restoring fragile states. Sequencing process in peace settlements? (Mansfield and Snyder)

  • Lijphart 15

    Types of DemocraciesypSource: Lijphart Democracies (1999)

    Democracies

    Majoritarian Mixed Consensus(Westminster) (Consociational)

    egUK?

    N Z l d?

    egUSA

    C t Ri

    egEU

    B l iNew Zealand?Barbados

    Costa RicaFrance

    BelgiumSwitzerland

  • Ref: Arend Lijphart Patterns of Democracy 1999

    Majoritarian ModelEffective and accountable

    Consensus ModelInclusive and representativep

    Exec-Parties One-party cabinet Coalition government

    Parliament Executive dominant Balanced exec-legislature

    Party system Two-party Multi-party

    Electoral system Majoritarian Proportional Representation

    Interest groups Pluralist Corporatist

    Federal-UnitaryFederal Unitary

    Government Centralized-unitary Decentralized-federal

    Parliament Unicameral Balanced BicameralParliament Unicameral Balanced Bicameral

    Constitution Flexible More Rigid

    Judiciary Parlt sovereign Judicial reviewJudiciary Parlt. sovereign Judicial review

    Central Bank Dependent Independent

  • Lijphart 19Typology of DemocraciesRef: Lijphart Patterns of Democracy 1999

    3

    USGER

    Consensual

    e

    r

    a

    l

    2SWI

    CAN

    AUT

    AUL

    a

    r

    y

    -

    F

    e

    d

    e 1

    0VEN

    TRI

    SPAPNGNET

    MAUJPN

    BELBAH

    U

    n

    i

    t

    a 0

    1 UK

    TRI

    SWEPOR NORMAL

    JAM ITA

    ISR

    IRE

    ICE

    GRE

    FRA

    FIN

    DENCRBOTBAR

    BAH

    -1

    -2

    UK

    NZ

    Majoritarian

    Executive-Parties

    2.01.00.0-1.0-2.0j

  • Lijphart 20

    Consensus democracy mattersy

    For the inclusion of minority parties For the inclusion of minority parties For the protection of minority interests

    F t ti For womens representation For public policy, economic outcomes,

    and welfare states

  • II: Majoritarian institutions

    Case study: UK 5th May 2005 y ygeneral election

  • Lijphart 22

    Institutions: UK 1945-1997

    Unwritten constitution Magna Carta etc.g One-party cabinet government since 1945

    Collective responsibility, primus inter pares

    Two-party parliamentary competition Two-party parliamentary competition Labour and Conservative in govnt and opposition

    Programmatic & disciplined partiesMass branch part organi ations fe independents fe Mass-branch party organizations, few independents, few backbench rebellions, manifesto program

    Parliamentary sovereignty (no Supreme Court)U it t t (l l t d i i t ti ) Unitary state (local government administration)

    Bicameral parliament but Commons predominant Plurality FPTP elections exaggerates votes: seats u a ty e ect o s e agge ates otes seats

    for winner

  • Lijphart 23

    UK House of Commons, June 2005

    923100%

    62

    Conservative

    LibDems

    197

    50%

    OthersNatsLd

    Majority 66

    355

    50% LdemConLab

    Labour

    355

    0%

    MPs in UK House of Commons

  • Lijphart 24

    UK Ballot paperp p

  • Lijphart 25

    2005 UK election resultJune 2005 % of Votes % of seats Ratio Number of

    seatsLabour 35.2 54.9 1.56 355

    Conservative 32.3 30.4 0.94 197

    Lib Dem 22.0 9.5 0.43 62Lib Dem 22.0 9.5 0.43 62

    SNP 1.5 0.9 0.60 6

    PC 0.6 0.5 0.83 3

    Other 8.4 3.4 0.40 23

    Labour Maj. 2.9 24.5 66

    Total 100 100 659

    Source: Pippa Norris & Chris Wlezien Ed. Britain Votes 2005 (OUP 2005)

  • Lijphart 26

    Winners bonus UK

    1 541.56

    1.60

    1.441.46

    1.54

    1.50

    1.28 1.27 1.28

    1.37

    1.30

    1.40

    s

    :

    s

    e

    a

    t

    s

    r

    a

    t

    i

    o

    1 09 1.10

    1.171.14

    1.20

    1.13

    1.221.23

    1.20

    V

    o

    t

    e

    s

    1.091.07

    1.10

    1.00

    1.10

    1945 1950 1951 1955 1959 1964 1966 1970 1974 1974 1979 1983 1987 1992 1997 2001 2005

    Note: The votes-seats ratio is calculated as the percentage of UK seats divided into the percentage of UK votes for the governing party. A ratio of 1.0 would indicate no electoral bias for the government. Source: Pippa Norris & Chris Wlezien Ed. Britain Votes 2005 (OUP 2005)

    1945 1950 1951 1955 1959 1964 1966 1970 1974 1974 1979 1983 1987 1992 1997 2001 2005

  • Lijphart 27

    UK % Vote 1900-200570

    50

    60

    30

    40

    %

    o

    f

    U

    K

    v

    o

    t

    e ConLabLDOther

    20

    %

    Other

    0

    10

    19001906191019101918192219231924192919311935194519501951195519591964196619701974197419791983198719921997200120050 6 0 0 8 2 3 4 9 1 5 5 0 1 5 9 4 6 0 4 4 9 3 7 2 7 1 5

    Source: Pippa Norris Elections & public Opinion The Blair Effect II: The Labour Government 2001-2005Edited by Anthony Seldon and Denis Kavanagh Cambridge University Press

  • Lijphart 28

    UK % Seats600

    400

    500

    300

    u

    m

    b

    e

    r

    o

    f

    M

    P

    s

    ConLabLDOther

    100

    200Nu

    0 1900190619101910191819221923192419291931193519451950195119551959196419661970197419741979198319871992199720012005

    Source: Pippa Norris Elections & public Opinion The Blair Effect II: The Labour Government 2001-2005Edited by Anthony Seldon and Denis Kavanagh Cambridge University Press

  • Lijphart 29

    Why exaggerative bias for winner?

    1 Malapportionment1. Malapportionment Unequal size of electorates in each seat Decline of urban pop/Labour constituencyDecline of urban pop/Labour constituency Delayed effect of boundary changes

    Differential turnout Differential turnout Lowest in safe Labour seats

    Anti-Conservative tactical voting Anti Conservative tactical voting Efficient distribution of party votes

  • Lijphart 30

    Geography also matters:UK 2005 Election SeatsUK 2005 Election Seats

    Source: Pippa Norris Britain Votes 2005 (OUP 2005)

  • Lijphart 31

    Simulated seats GB June 2005

    355400

    239300

    350 LabConLd239

    197 207

    140150

    200

    250 LdemUKIPNat

    62

    119 1850

    100

    150 GreenBNPOther

    0 119 180 50 44 30

    50

    Actual results FPTP List PR

    Source: Dunleavy and Margetts in Pippa Norris (Ed) Britain Votes 2005 OUP

  • Lijphart 32

    Projection next UK general election

    380

    400

    320

    340

    360

    380

    e

    M

    P

    s

    7

    8

    9

    Conservative Government

    Vote swing is the %

    260

    280

    300

    o

    f

    C

    o

    n

    s

    e

    r

    v

    a

    t

    i

    v

    e

    3

    4

    5

    6

    Hung Parliament

    change in the two-party vote

    200

    220

    240

    N

    u

    m

    b

    e

    r

    o

    0

    1

    -1

    2

    140 160 180 200 220 240 260 280 300 320 340 360 380 400

    N b f L b MP

    140

    160

    180 Labour Government

    Number of Labour MPs

    Note: The estimates assume a Con-Lab uniform national swing across the UK with no change in the share of the vote for the other parties.A positive swing indicates a fall in the Labour party, and increase in the Conservative party, share of the total vote. A negative denotes theopposite. The winning post necessary to assure an overall parliamentary majority for one party is half the 646 MPs ie 324. Source: NorrisBritain Votes 2005 OUP.

  • Lijphart 33

    Moderate party competitionp y p

    Source: Comparative Manifesto Project/ Judith Bara EPOP 2005

  • Lijphart 34

    Breakdown of classic ideal type since 1997

    Federalism: Devolution for Scotland and Wales Northern Ireland assembly Elected Mayor/Assembly for London

    Electoral reform: Party list PR for Europe AMS for Scotland/Wales AMS for Scotland/Wales STV for Scottish local elections

    House of Lords reform (?) Written Bill of Rights- Euro. Convention Direct referendums

  • Advantages andAdvantages and disadvantages?

  • III: Consensus democracyy

    Switzerland

  • Lijphart 37

    Swiss democracyy

    Pop 7.4mp Plural cleavages

    Religion (46% Catholic, 40% Protestant) Language

    (65%German, 10% Italian, 18% French),

    Region/canton Region/canton Class ($32,800 per capita PPP 2003)

    Social divisions, yet elite consensus? Stable power-sharing coalition but lack of

    accountability?

  • Lijphart 38

    Swiss democracy y

    Since 1848, Switzerland has been a confederation, tl ith 26 t d 2873currently with 26 cantons and 2873 communes.

    The Government (Federal Council) has 7 members elected by parliament for 4 yearsy p y

    From 1959-2003, magic formula 2 seats each for the FDP, CVP, and SPS, and 1 seat for the SVPSVP.

    October 2003, 2 seats given to SVP, 1 CVP Annual president rotates as primus inter pares

  • Lijphart 39

    Swiss parliamentp

    Bicameral Federal Assembly: Bicameral Federal Assembly: Direct elections PR List elections w. high proportionality votes : seats

    Th N ti l C il ( l t ti 200 t The National Council (popular representation, 200 seats, based on population size per canton) and

    The Council of States (cantonal representation, 46 seats, 2 t )2 per canton)

    Eight party factions in Federal Assembly and 13 parties in total.

    Federal Supreme Court Many popular initiatives and referendums.

  • Lijphart 40

    October 2003 Election resultsNationalrat and Stnderat: 19 october 2003 (%) %Vote 200 %Seats 46

    Schweizerische Volkspartei SVP 26.6 55 27.5% 8

    Sozialdemokratische Partei der Schweiz SPS 23.4 52 26.0% 9

    Freisinnig-Demokratische Partei der Schweiz FDP 17.3 36 18.0% 14

    Christlich-Demokratische Volkspartei der Schweiz CVP 14.4 28 14.0% 15

    Grne Partei der Schweiz GPS 7.4 13 6.5% -

    Liberale Partei der Schweiz LPS 2.2 4 2.0% -

    Evangelische Volkspartei der Schweiz EVP 2.3 3 1.5% -

    Eidgenssische Demokratische Union EDU 1.3 2 1.0% -

    Schweizer Demokraten SD 1 0 1 0 5%Schweizer Demokraten SD 1.0 1 0.5% -

    Partei der Arbeit der Schweiz PdA 0.7 2 1.0% -

    Lega dei Ticinese LdT 0.4 1 0.5% -

    Solidarits Sol 0.5 1 0.5% -

    Christlich-Soziale Partei CSP 0.4 1 0.5% -

    Alternative Liste AL 0.5 1 0.5% -

    - Sozialistisch Grne Alternative Zug SGAZ 1

    Freiheitspartei der Schweiz FPS 0.2 - -

  • Lijphart 41

    Swiss party competitionp y p

    European LiberalEuropean Liberal

    SP Social Free CVP Christian Democrats

    RightLeft

    Democratic Democrats

    SVP Radical right

    Green Party right

    Conservative

    Note: Legislative voting patterns 1999-2003

  • Advantages andAdvantages and disadvantages?

  • Lijphart 43

    IV: Discussion exercise

    In designing new constitutions for In designing new constitutions for Afghanistan, Iraq, Sudan and Nepal, what are the pros and cons of each typewhat are the pros and cons of each type of democracy?

    What would be the major consequences What would be the major consequences of these institutional choices for stability and effectiveness?and effectiveness?

  • Lijphart 44

    Conclusions

    Useful classification of democratic institutions From ideal types to continuous measures Clarifies values and normative debates Systematic comparisons Consequences of institutional design?

    Next class: Electoral Systems

  • Lijphart 45

    Next classPart III: Options: reform strategies and agencies

    h13 Mon 16th Mar Strategies and options for strengthening democratic governance

    #1

    14 Wed 18th Mar Constitution-building: International IDEA

    15 Mon 30th Mar Elections: ACE and IFES

    16 Wed 1st Apr Strengthening parliaments, parties, and womens empowerment: the Inter-parliamentary Union

    17 Mon 6th Apr Building the state: public administration reform, local governance, and anti-corruption: Transparency International

    18 Wed 8th Apr Civil society social capital and media: the Open Society18 Wed 8th Apr Civil society, social capital, and media: the Open Society Institute and CIVICUS, Committee to Protect Journalists

    19 Mon 13th Apr Human rights, justice, and rule of law: Amnesty International # 2

  • Lijphart 46