Think Anew, Act Anew

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The antidote for a sick democracy, is a lot more democracy

A-packed-House-of-Commons-006

It is fashionable, to the point of being tedious, for people to complain about the perks, wages and lifestyle advantages associated with being a Member of Parliament or a Member of a Provincial Legislative Assembly.   Coupled with the fact that the vast majority of them don’t have much to do (only a sliver of each House is in Cabinet – the rest are on government backbenches or in Opposition), being an MP or MPP looks like a pretty soft ride.   That’s particularly true when you factor in that most MPs don’t even have to think much – they let their Party leader or whip do the thinking for them.  They need only yell “aye”, or “nay” or not show up, or show up, as directed.   MPs are essentially extras on the film set of our representative democracy, with access to the catering table but nothing more to do than mill about in the background of the movie stars.

All of these miserable truths conspire to make MPs / MPPs less valuable, which of course at a standing price, makes them look more expensive.   Who needs 310 or 340 MPs when about 30 of them actually have work to do?

The answer is: you need them.   But you don’t need 310 or 340 of them.  You need about 600 or 700 MPs, representing smaller ridings or at the very least, being one of 2 or 3 members for each of the existing ridings.  The last thing we need in our parliaments is less brain power.  We need more.    And the only way to attract it, is to make the job attractive.   Here’s how:

  1. create more MPs and MPPs in each legislature.   This has several salutary effects:  (1) more people, including maybe some smart people, go into parliament (2) each citizen gets twice as much representation (3) the odds of reaching Cabinet or even the Opposition frontbench will plummet for each MP, which in turn means (4) they won’t dwell quite so much on personal advancement, or at least, not at kowtowing to the whip or leader because (5) advancement will come through individual achievement and (6) advancement will take different forms – simply being a good MP may be good enough for many of our 600 or so elected representatives;
  2. remove the financial penalty and reward for seeking or keeping office.   How?   Pay MPs approximately what they earned before they were elected to office.   Why?  (1) The unsuccessful insurance broker who finagles a party nomination will find that being in the House doesn’t pay a nickel more than his unsuccessful insurance brokerage, and if he’s looking for a longer term salary increase, he will have to find it somewhere else (2) the highly paid person who can’t afford to take the salary cut to be an MP, will no longer face that huge disincentive to get involved, so she will run.
  3. allow Parliament to meet virtually.   There is simply no need for houses of representatives to only meet in one place (the capital city).    Anybody with a laptop and a skype account can attend Parliament from his car, a park bench or – hopefully – his constituency.   She can attend every day, like clockwork (and she should be required to do so, or lose pay unless sick).   This will reduce travel costs, create better representation in the ridings and make the expansion of parliament quite easy.    It will also augment member independence, a desperately-needed antidote to our depressed democracy.
  4. eliminate party funding, period.    Permit individual voters to donate to individual MPs and candidates, but not to the parties.   The only people who should be able to contribute to parties directly are MPs or nominated candidates.   This will invert the power relationship between individual candidates and their parties – a desperately needed move.

Those are a few changes, some of which could be accomplished pretty quickly (items 2, 3 and 4).  Hell, even riding boundaries and numbers can be changed easily enough.

We have to do something.   Increasing the number of people involved in the process, while reducing the incentive to please the party bosses would go a great distance towards enabling and rewarding independent thinking and action.  Right now, the crucial move is to restore “representation” to our representative democracy.

 

 

2 comments on “The antidote for a sick democracy, is a lot more democracy

  1. Bill Calvert
    May 9, 2013

    The antidote is a more engaged electorate. The only valid reason for increasing the number of MPs or MLAs would be in the service of proportional representation.

    Like

  2. Michael A Giunta
    September 11, 2018

    more not less representation…I am all in!

    Like

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This entry was posted on May 9, 2013 by in Canada, The U.S.A..