Title: LEGISLATIVE DEMOCRACY
1LEGISLATIVE DEMOCRACY Dr. Bill CrossDirector
of Research
Presentation to Commissioners February 19 20,
2004
2MANDATE
- To examine and make recommendations on enhancing
the role of the Legislative Assembly and MLAs in
decision-making while ensuring greater
accountability of MLAs to their constituents and
to New Brunswickers. - To examine and make recommendations on enhancing
transparency and accountability in appointments
to government agencies, boards, and commissions.
3FOCUS OF PRESENTATION
- Role of Legislature
- and
- Role of Legislator
4KEY QUESTION WHY LEGISLATURES?
- ROOTS OF DEMOCRACY CITIZENS ON ATHENS HILL
- TODAY PROBLEMS OF SIZE (NUMBERS AND GEOGRAPHY)
PREVENT THIS - COLLECTED VS. COLLECTIVE DEMOCRACY DILEMMA
5FUNCTIONS OF LEGISLATURE
- CHOOSE A GOVERNMENT
- REPRESENTATION
- SCRUTINY/ACCOUNTABILITY
- LEGISLATE
- LINK BETWEEN GOVERNMENT AND PUBLIC
61. CHOOSING GOVERNMENT
- IN OUR SYSTEM - ALMOST ALWAYS PARTY WITH MOST
SEATS - RARE EXCEPTIONS e.g. ONTARIO 1985
- CAN BE MINORITY OR MAJORITY GOVERNMENT (RARELY
COALITION) - GOVERNMENT MUST MAINTAIN CONFIDENCE OF THE
LEGISLATURE - SELECTION OF CABINET OUR SYSTEM PM, OTHERS
GOVT CAUCUS PLAYS ROLE
72. REPRESENTATION(focus of todays presentation)
- TRUSTEE
- DELEGATE
- POLITICO
8TRUSTEE REPRESENTATION
- LEGISLATORS RELY ON THEIR OWN WISDOM AND JUDGMENT
- PAROCHIAL INTERESTS SECOND TO NATIONAL INTEREST
AS DEFINED BY LEGISLATOR - BURKEAN VIEW OF REPRESENTATION
9DELEGATE REPRESENTATION
- LEGISLATORS ARE VOICES OF LOCAL EXPRESSION
- ELECTED TO FOLLOW THE WISHES OF THEIR
CONSTITUENTS - NATIONAL INTEREST IS AGGREGATE OF LOCAL INTERESTS
- INTERESTS REPRESENTED ARE PRIMARILY GEOGRAPHIC
10POLITICO REPRESENTATION
- LEGISLATOR AS POLITICAL OPERATIVE
- RECOGNIZES IMPORTANCE OF PARTY DISCIPLINE
- IN OUR SYSTEM PARTY DISCIPLINE NORMALLY TRUMPS
DELEGATE AND TRUSTEE PERSPECTIVES
11VIEWS OF VOTERS
- BELIEVE PARTY DISCIPLINE TOO STRONG
- BELIEVE LEGISLATORS OUT OF TOUCH
- EVIDENCE THAT THEY PREFER DELEGATE ROLE
- OFTEN ADMIRE THOSE WHO FUNCTION AS TRUSTEES WITH
STRONG COMMUNICATION WITH CONSTITUENTS
12HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
- LONG TRADITION OF PARTIES RUNNING AGAINST STRONG
PARTY DISCIPLINE AND IN FAVOUR OF DELEGATE ROLE
FOR LEGISLATORS - PROVINCIALLY THE FARMERS PARTIES IN EARLY 20TH
CENTURY - FEDERALLY THE PROGRESSIVES IN 1920s, REFORM IN
1990s - CONFEDERATION OF REGIONS PARTY IN NEW BRUNSWICK
IN 1990s
13UNITED FARMERS OF ALBERTA
- 1921 ELECTION PLATFORM
- EACH ELECTED REPRESENTATIVE IS ANSWERABLE
DIRECTLY TO THE ORGANIZATION IN THE CONSTITUENCY
THAT ELECTED HIM. -
- NOTE RESPONSIBLE NOT TO CONSTITUENTS, BUT TO
LOCAL PARTY ORGANIZATION
14RESULT
- AFTER WINNING POWER, THE UFA
- QUICKLY SLID INTO THE CONVENTIONAL PARTY MODE.
- POWER HAS A WONDERFUL FASCINATION, ONCE ENJOYED
BY A FARMERS PARTY IT WOULD BE AS CORRUPT AS
ITS RIVALS.
15CCF/NDP
- TRADITION OF LEGISLATORS BEING RESPONSIVE TO
PARTY IN CONVENTION (NOTE NOT TO CONSTITUENTS,
BUT TO PARTY MEMBERS) - OCCASSIONAL SIMILAR EFFORTS IN OTHER PARTIES
(LIBERALS, 1960s/70s)
16IRON LAW OF OLIGARCHY
- PARTY DEMOCRATIZATION EFFORTS ALMOST ALWAYS
WITHER WITH PROXIMITY TO GOVERNMENT - E.G ONTARIO NEW DEMOCRATS, 1990
17PM MACKENZIE KING (1948)
- The substitution, by force or otherwise, of the
dictates of a single political party for the
authority of a freely elected Parliament is
something which, in far too many countries, has
already taken place. It is along this path that
many nations have lost their freedom.
18REFORM PARTY
- CONSTITUTION
- WE BELIEVE IN ACCOUNTABILITY OF ELECTED
REPRESENTATIVES TO THE PEOPLE WHO ELECT THEM, AND
THAT THE DUTY OF ELECTED MEMBERS TO THEIR
CONSTITUENTS SHOULD SUPERSEDE THEIR OBLIGATIONS
TO THEIR POLITICAL PARTIES.
19PAUL MARTINS DEMOCRATIC DEFICIT
- 3 LINE VOTING SYSTEM
- ONE LINE VOTES -- MPs FREE TO VOTE AS THEY
SEE FIT - TWO LINE VOTES MPs FREE TO VOTE AS THEY SEE
FIT, CABINET AND PARL. SECRETARIES EXPECTED TO
SUPPORT GOVERNMENT POSITION - THREE LINE VOTES MATTERS OF CONFIDENCE, ALL
GOVERNMENT MEMBERS EXPECTED TO SUPPORT THE
GOVERNMENT
20ONE AND TWO LINE VOTES
- NO EXPECTATION THAT MEMBERS WILL REPRESENT THE
VIEWS OF THEIR CONSTITUENTS - HISTORY SHOWS THIS IS VERY DIFFICULT TO REQUIRE
21DETERMINING CONSTITUENTS VIEWS
- LETTERS RECEIVED IN OFFICE
- EMAIL MESSAGES RECEIVED
- PHONE CALLS TO OFFICE
- PETITIONS
- FOLKS TALKED TO DURING VISIT TO RIDING
- SURE TO AMOUNT TO SMALL MINORITY OF CONSTITUENTS
- INTENSITY DILEMMA
- TOWN HALLS
22POPULATION SIZE OF CONSTITUENCY
- CANADIAN RANGE (PROVINCES)
- 5,010 (PEI) -- 110,777 (ONTARIO)
- NEW BRUNSWICK 13,269
- NEW BRUNSWICK FEDERALLY 72,950
23REFORM PARTY EXPERIENCE
- REFORM PARTY REQUIRED MEMBERS TO FOLLOW PARTY
LINE UNLESS THEY COULD PROVE THAT THEIR
CONSTITUENTS DISAGREED AND THEY WISHED TO FOLLOW
THEIR CONSTITUENTS VIEWS - DIFFICULTY WAS IN DETERMINING VIEWS OF THEIR
CONSTITUENTS
24REFORM PARTY EXPERIENCE (CONT.)
- APRIL 1994, 5 CALGARY MPs (INCLUDING MANNING)
ORGANIZE TELEPHONE VOTE OF CONSTITUENTS, IN
CONJUNCTION WITH CABLE TV PROGRAM, ON ISSUE OF
PHYSICIAN-ASSISTED SUICIDE - ESTIMATED 20,000 VIEWED PROGRAM, 1,533 PHONED IN
THEIR OPINIONS
25REFORM PARTY EXPERIENCE (CONT.)
- CANADA SPEAKS PROJECT VIEWS ON CANADIAN
FEDERALISM (SEPT./OCT. 1994) - YOU BE THE FINANCE MINISTER (FEB. 1995)
- NEVER MORE THAN 10,000 CALLERS
- NON-REPRESENTATIVE, SELF-SELECTED PARTICIPANTS
26MP TED WHITES PROJECT
- OBJECTIVE DETERMINE CONSTITUENTS VIEWS
REGARDING REFORM OF YOUNG OFFENDERS ACT - MAILED HOUSEHOLDER AND PIN TO EACH CONSTITUENT
- ADVERTISEMENTS IN LOCAL NEWSPAPER
- PARTICIPATION RATE OF LESS THAN 7 PER CENT
27MPs POLICY MANDATE?
- NOMINATION CONTESTS ALMOST NEVER ABOUT POLICY
- DEBATES BETWEEN NOMINATION CANDIDATES ARE RARE
- GENERAL ELECTION CANDIDATES RARELY STAKE OUT
POSITIONS DIFFERENT FROM THEIR PARTY - MOST VOTERS PRIMARILY INFLUENCED BY PARTY AND
LEADER NOT LOCAL CANDIDATE
28VOTERS DILEMMA
- VOTER A FAVOURS SAME SEX MARRIAGES AND CARES
DEEPLY ABOUT THE ISSUE. A IS A LIBERAL PARTY
SUPPORTER - VOTER As LOCAL LIBERAL CANDIDATE OPPOSES SAME
SEX MARRIAGES - NATIONAL LIBERAL PARTY LEADERSHIP FAVOURS SAME
SEX MARRIAGES AND PROMISES A FREE VOTE - CONSERVATIVES (OPPOSE SAME SEX MARRIAGE BUT LOCAL
CANDIDATE SUPPORTS THEM)
293. SCRUTINY
- LEGISLATURE SERVES AS A WATCH DOG ON THE
GOVERNMENT OF THE DAY - THE EXECUTIVE (CABINET) RUNS THE GOVERNMENT AND
LEGISLATURE HOLDS THEM ACCOUNTABLE -
30SCRUTINY (CONT)
- ROLE OF SCRUTINY PRIMARILY FULFILLED BY
OPPOSITION - REQUIRES SUFFICIENT OPPOSITION MEMBERS
CONNECTION TO ELECTORAL SYSTEM
31CHALLENGE OF SMALL LEGISLATURES
- CAN HAVE ONE SIDED LEGISLATURES WITH FEW
OPPOSITION MEMBERS - E.G. NEW BRUNSWICK 1987, 1991, 1995
- PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, BRITISH COLUMBIA
- EFFECT OF ELECTORAL SYSTEM
32SCRUTINY (CONT.)
- GOVERNMENT BACK BENCHERS CAN PLAY SCRUTINY ROLE
BUT USUALLY LIMITED IN EFFECTIVENESS BECAUSE OF
AMBITION - LEGISLATIVE OFFICERS PLAY IMPORTANT ROLE
(ESPECIALLY WHEN OPPOSITION IS INEFFECTIVE) E.G.
AUDITOR GENERAL -
33SCRUTINY TOOLS
- TOOLS FOR SCRUTINY INCLUDE
- QUESTION PERIOD
- LEGISLATIVE DEBATES
- COMMITTEE WORK
- FOR GOVERNMENT BACK BENCHERS ALSO CAUCUS BUT
THIS IS PRIVATE, NOT TRANSPARENT
34SCRUTINY TOOLS (CONT.)
- ALL OF THESE REQUIRE THAT THE LEGISLATURE BE
SITTING - 2002 NUMBER OF SITTING DAYS
- PROVINCIAL RANGE
- 80 (QUEBEC) to 50 (NEW BRUNSWICK)
- MOST IN THE 50-70 RANGE
- NS 67, PEI 55, NEWFOUNDLAND 60
35QUESTION PERIOD
- LENGTH VARIES IN CANADIAN LEGISLATURES FROM 15
MINUTES (BC) TO 60 MINUTES (ONTARIO) - NEW BRUNSWICK 30 MINUTES
- 6 OF 9 OTHER PROVINCES ALLOW MORE TIME
(INCLUDING PEI AND NS)
36QUESTION PERIOD (CONT.)
- NUMBER OF MEMBERS ASKING QUESTIONS RANGES FROM
- 2-3 DAILY IN NEWFOUNDLAND
- to
- 13-15 DAILY IN ONTARIO
- 5-6 TYPICALLY IN NEW BRUNSWICK
37SCRUTINY AND COMMITTEES
- COMMITTEES CAN BE AN IMPORTANT CHECK ON THE
GOVERNMENT - EFFECTIVENESS DEPENDS ON NUMBER, STRUCTURE, HOW
OFTEN THEY MEET - AND RESOURCES AVAILABLE(STAFF, BUDGET)
- WHO CHOOSES COMMITTEE CHAIRS
- OPPOSITION PARTY REPRESENTATION IN COMMITTEES
- (MORE ON NB COMMITTEES IN NEXT PRESENTATION)
384. LEGISLATION
- WITH EXCEPTION OF PRIVATE MEMBERS BILLS,
LEGISLATURE PASSES OR DEFEATS BUT DOES NOT
INITIATE LEGISLATION
39DEBATE ON LEGISLATION
- LEGISLATURE MEANT TO FULLY DEBATE GOVERNMENTS
PROPOSED LEGISLATION - IS THERE SUFFICIENT TIME FOR DEBATE? DOES THE
GOVERNMENT INVOKE CLOTURE? - COMMITTEE WORK PROVIDES ANOTHER OPPORTUNITY FOR
MEMBERS TO INFLUENCE LEGISLATION
40COLLECTIVE DECISION MAKING
- OUR SYSTEM IS BASED ON ADVERSARIAL APPROACH
SIMILAR TO JUDICIAL MODEL - LITTLE OPPORTUNITY FOR REAL COLLECTIVE DECISION
MAKING - ELECTORAL SYSTEMS FAVOURING COALITION OUTCOMES
ENCOURAGE MORE CONSENSUS BUILDING IN LEGISLATURE
415. LINK BETWEEN GOVERNMENT AND PUBLIC
- DOES LEGISLATURE REFLECT THE MAKE-UP OF PROVINCE?
- GENDER, ETHNICITY, AGE, REGION,
- LANGUAGE ETC.
- (DISCUSSED IN EARLIER PRESENTATION)
42INTEREST REPRESENTATION
- ARE NON-GEOGRAPHICAL INTERESTS REPRESENTED IN
LEGISLATURE? - E.G. ENVIRONMENTALISTS, GAYS/LESBIANS, SENIORS
- ELECTORAL SYSTEM WORKS AGAINST REPRESENTATION
OF THESE INTERESTS
43COMMITTEE PARTICIPATION
- ARE INTERESTS HEARD DURING COMMITTEE WORK?
- EXPERT TESTIMONY, GROUP PRESENTATIONS ETC.
44TRANSPARENCY
- IS WORK OF LEGISLATURE READILY APPARENT TO
PUBLIC? - TELEVISED SITTINGS, COMMITTEE WORK OPEN TO PUBLIC
- WEB ACCESS TO WORK OF MEMBERS AND COMMITTEES
45WEB PRESENCE
- DOES LEGISLATURES HOME PAGE HAVE DIRECT LINKS TO
MEMBERS E-MAIL? (NB YES) - DOES LEGISLATURES HOME PAGE HAVE DIRECT LINKS TO
MEMBERS WEB PAGES? (NB NO) - ARE LEGISLATIVE UPDATES AND COMMITTEE REPORTS
AVAILABLE ON WEB PAGE?
46CONSTITUENCY WORK OF MLAs
- MUCH OF LEGISLATORS TIME AND EFFORT SPENT ON
OMBUDSPERSON ROLE PROVIDING CONSTITUENT SERVICE - PROVINCIAL LEGISLATORS REPORT ABOUT 40 OF THEIR
TIME SPENT ON THIS WORK, AND CLOSE TO HALF OF
THEIR STAFFS WORK
47LEGISLATORS EXPECTATIONS
- LEGISLATORS OFTEN SURPRISED TO LEARN (DURING
FIRST TERM) THAT THEY PLAY LIMITED ROLE IN POLICY
MAKING AND THAT THEIR ROLE IS LARGELY ONE OF
PROVIDING CONSTITUENCY SERVICE.
48VOTERS EXPECTATIONS
- VOTERS EXPECT STRONG CONSTITUENCY SERVICE FROM
MEMBERS. - UNCLEAR HOW VOTERS SEE THE BALANCE BETWEEN
CONSTITUENCY AND POLICY WORK AREA FOR RESEARCH - THE CHOICE OF ELECTORAL SYSTEM SHOULD REFLECT
THIS BALANCE
49RESOURCES
- PROVIDING CONSTITUENCY SERVICE REQUIRES
RESOURCES CONSTITUENCY OFFICES, STAFF, BUDGET - NB MEMBERS HAVE BUDGET OF 25,000
- EXAMPLES OF OTHER PROVINCES ONTARIO, 153,000
NOVA SCOTIA, 48,000
50RESOURCES AND POLICY CONCENTRATION
- A LACK OF RESOURCES FOR INDIVIDUAL MEMBERS AND
FOR COMMITTEES ADDS TO THE GOVERNING FROM THE
CENTRE THESIS POLICY MAKING CONCENTRATION
WITHIN THE EXECUTIVE.