We need electoral reforms, not circuses

We need electoral reforms, not circuses
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The run-up to Goa’s elections 2022 has been, as expected, like a bad joke, a circus of promises (the more bizarre, the better), defections, u-turns, allegations and counter-allegations, along with displays of the usual money- and muscle-power. And, whether you are amused or sickened by all this pre-election hoopla, the post-election scenario is not difficult to foresee, when it comes to the interests of the ordinary voter. While many Goans speak of the urgent need for change, we all know – given Goa’s last elections, as well as elections elsewhere since then – that just voting may not ensure this. But what is even worse is the question of – if indeed the BJP is voted out – whether a different government will mean different governance? 

There is no doubt that there will be some change; it would be surely difficult to be this bad. We could see less stoking of the communal fires, and hopefully some interest in the huge – COVID-induced but government-worsened – educational crisis faced by kids in Goa, and also some help – financial and otherwise – to those who have lost income and livelihoods in the pandemic. 

All of this much-needed, without any doubt. But what about the bigger and long-term problems threatening Goans and their future? What about the casinos, the coal corridor, and Mollem? And the wholesale hill- and forest-cutting? What about the juggernaut of real estate development that even COVID could not halt? What about the burden of the agent-contractor-builder-politician nexus on every public work, infrastructure and facility, like medical essentials in the middle of COVID’s deadly second wave? What about the ignoring of all social justice issues, from reservations to land rights, that has been happening for decades? 

Rahul Gandhi has declared that Goa will not develop into a coal hub but into a tourist hub; but haven’t we also had enough of the exploitative relations and environmental destruction that mark the latter? Even if a new government is able to put a brake on some projects – and this won’t be easy, given the corporate funding of political parties – it isn’t enough. Goa needs a brake on ALL this kind of development, and a focus on social and environmental justice. 

But none of us expects to get this, whoever comes to power. There’s a reason for this cynicism – it’s because all of us have seen how the electoral system functions; we know that there is no space for any real change here. What this means, however, is that the system has to change. We need electoral reform. This was precisely the point made by Rahul Sonpimple and Cynthia Stephen in January, when they spoke at the Ambedkar Memorial Lectures 2022. Both of them pointed out how the current electoral system is designed to offer no real options to the vast majority of common people. 

One of the problems is the First-Past-The-Post (FPTP) system. Under this system, it is not the votes that count, but the seats won. So if a party wins a majority of seats, it gets complete power. The fact that it might have got less than half of the votes polled does not matter. But, what this means is that more than half of the votes polled in the elections have no value, and no representation. Is this democratic? 

Compare this to Proportional-Representation (PR), where parties get seats in power  based on the number of votes they poll. Even those parties who get a minority of the votes polled will be represented in power, thus making each vote count. 

The second issue is Separate Electorates. Rahul Sonpimple spoke of how the efforts to achieve genuine political representation for marginalised castes and communities has been thwarted in India right from 1947, because they are usually minorities in their constituencies, and the winners of elections are always those chosen by the majority. This was why Dr Ambedkar had demanded separate electorates for Scheduled Caste communities. The British government accepted this, but it was finally withdrawn following Gandhi’s fast-unto-death in protest. Thus, instead of separate electorates, what we have today is the reservation of seats for scheduled castes and scheduled tribes. This has led, as Kanshi Ram put it in his eponymous book, to the ‘Chamcha Age’. He was referring to how, given that the voting in these reserved seats is also by non SC/ST voters who are usually in the majority, the winning candidates are usually those seen as not against the interests of the dominant castes, not strongly representing the SC and ST population, and overall more amenable to the status quo. 

Separate electorates, on the other hand, would see the most deprived communities, like the SC and tribal communities of Goa, getting their own political representation while they also vote for general candidates in their constituencies, i.e. they vote twice. As Cynthia Stephen pointed out, there are already such separate electorates in India – like the teachers’ and graduates’ representatives in some states. If you register as a teachers’ voter, you vote twice, for a general candidate and for a teachers’ representative. 

The Proportional Representation system and Separate Electorates are the two critical electoral reforms which must be brought in, to begin with. Rahul Sonpimple also spoke of Dr Ambedkar’s proposal of separate settlements for oppressed communities. This would ensure that the needs of the latter don’t get ignored, as happens in Goa even under ‘ideal’ village development schemes; and also that their votes count. This is also worth considering.

Remember, if today’s elections are a horrible joke, that joke is on us. We need to change the fundamentals, not just the faces. 

(Amita Kanekar is an 

architectural Historian 

and Novelist)

Herald Goa
www.heraldgoa.in