http://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2011/02/17/how-to-have-fair-elections-in-egypt/how-to-avoid-the-hamas-problem

How to Have Fair Elections in Egypt

What kinds of electoral systems have worked in post-crisis societies  
around the world?
How to Avoid the Hamas Problem
By Steven Hill
Opinion piece, Room for Debate, New York Times

February 17, 2011

Steven Hill is author of "10 Steps to Repair American Democracy" and  
"Europe's Promise: Why the European Way is the Best Hope in an  
Insecure Age." He is former director of the political reform program  
at the New America Foundation.   (http://www.Steven-Hill.com/?q=node/3)

There is great worry in many quarters that elections in Egypt could  
result in a polarized government, or even an Islamist takeover. But  
this need not happen if the electoral rules are constructed to  
encourage broad representation.

For an example of the wrong way to run an election, consider the  
Palestinian elections in January 2006. Hamas won a majority of  
legislative seats, but that was possible only because the “winner take  
all” electoral system used in those elections produced grossly  
unrepresentative results.

If the Palestinians had employed the proportional representation  
election systems used in many democracies around the world, the story  
would have turned out very differently. The lessons for Egypt are  
crucial.

The Palestinian elections used a combination of a U.S.-style winner- 
take-all electoral system and a more European-style proportional  
voting system. Germany uses a version of the “mixed member  
proportional”, as does New Zealand, Japan and other countries. (In the  
“mixed” system, a number of seats in the legislature are set aside for  
district representatives, and another set of “accountability seats”  
are held for parties to compensate for unbalanced partisan results in  
the district elections.)

Palestinian voters had two votes, one for their favorite political  
party (the proportional vote) and another for individual candidates in  
winner-take-all districts where the highest vote-getters win. In the  
proportional vote, which is a national vote and therefore the best  
measure of the overall support for each political party, Hamas won  
about 45 percent of the popular vote and about the same percentage of  
seats — 30 of 66, not a majority. The incumbent party, Fatah, won  
about 41 percent of the popular vote and 27 of 66 seats, only three  
seats behind Hamas.

So the popular vote actually was quite close, and if those were the  
only election results they would have produced a broadly  
representative legislature. Instead, the winner-take-all seats  
completely threw the election to Hamas.

Hamas won only 41 percent of the vote in the winner-take-all  
districts, yet won 68 percent of those seats. That gave them 45 of 66  
seats in the winner-take-all districts while Fatah won only 17  
district seats even though they had 36 percent of the winner take all  
vote.

Overall, Hamas won 57 percent of legislative seats even though their  
national support was around 45 percent. If they had a better electoral  
system, Hamas would not have won a majority of seats and perhaps would  
have formed a grand coalition with Fatah. The lopsided result was  
caused by a winner-take-all electoral system, which was susceptible to  
distortions from, split votes, poor strategic voting and Fatah running  
too many candidates.

Iraq, on the other hand, used a proportional system where each  
political party was awarded legislative seats in direct proportion to  
their share of the popular vote in each of 18 provinces. When the  
dominant Shi’ite party failed to win a majority of the popular vote,  
they also failed to win a majority of legislative seats. Instead, the  
Shi’ites had to negotiate with the Sunnis and Kurds, preserving a  
fragile balance of power.

The current Egyptian electoral system uses winner take all elections,  
with a first-round followed by a second round if no candidate wins a  
majority. This system could result in a faction with less than a  
popular majority winning more than a majority of seats, as it did in  
Palestine. It also could lead to fewer centrists getting elected and a  
polarized legislature.

By adopting new electoral rules, Egypt could avoid this polarizing  
outcome. Proportional representation would ensure that the Muslim  
Brotherhood, former Mubarak supporters as well as the many secular  
constituencies in Tahrir Square would each get their fair share of  
representation, but no more.


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