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Leading article: A vote that makes a difference

Sunday 09 January 2011 01:00 GMT
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Since it was founded 21 years ago, The Independent on Sunday has been in favour of change to a fairer voting system. In the past, we have voiced support for more radical reform than the alternative vote (AV), which is to be put to a referendum on 5 May. But now we are urging people to vote Yes in four months' time on the merits of the case, because AV would be a valuable democratic improvement on the existing system.

The debate about electoral reform has taken an unexpected turn in the past year. Last May's election produced a hung parliament, the kind of result assumed to be more likely under AV, and hence offered a window into a reformed future. But the arithmetic of the result confronted a number of people, and The Independent on Sunday, with a challenge.

Among those who supported a fairer voting system, there were a number who did so because of its presumed consequences, rather than for the principle of fairness itself. Their objective was to keep the Conservatives out, and they assumed that the Liberal Democrats were part of the ramparts against a Tory government. This newspaper half-shared that assumption, supporting tactical voting against David Cameron at the election last May.

That view has been blown apart, which forces electoral reformers to face up to what they think about the intrinsic rights and wrongs of different designs of democracy, rather than trying to second-guess the policy outcomes according to their own political preferences.

This is a paradoxical benefit of an uncertain election result. Electoral reformers ought to be driven back to first principles. To try to calculate the case for different voting systems by party advantage (or disadvantage) is not only wrong, it is also a mistake. Although we can guess how past elections might have turned out under AV, based on opinion-poll evidence of voters' second preferences (as we report today, there might have been a hung parliament in 1992 and a Lib-Lab deal might have been more possible last year), people would behave differently under a different system.

Now it is time, therefore, to consider the philosophical or pure case for the alternative vote. In this, we commend the Yes campaign in focusing on the voters rather than the politicians. From the voters' point of view, being able to number candidates in order of preference is a significant improvement on voting with an X. It allows people to express a full range of opinion and ensures that they can express a choice between any pair of candidates who may end up topping the poll, instead of, as under the present system, having to guess how others might vote.

AV is not proportional representation. It does not seek to match each party's share of the national vote with its number of MPs in the House of Commons. That is a debate to be put aside for now.

One of the sillier arguments of the No campaign, however, is that AV is a Trojan horse going down a slippery slope towards a proportional system. There is a parallel here with another constitutional reform, when it was argued, 14 years ago, that devolution would lead inevitably to full-blown independence for Scotland.

It is a poor argument, in both cases. If, eventually, the people of Scotland decide that they do want independence, would that mean that it was wrong to allow them to have their own parliament within the UK in 1997? And if, eventually, the people decide that they want an element of proportionality, possibly through a "top-up" system like Scotland's, would that mean that it was wrong to make this separate change now?

AV is a good change on its own terms. It ensures that voters have an equal chance to influence the outcome in their constituency, and to express their preferences honestly so that they can be counted, even if they do not support the winning candidate.

We accept that many people will be worrying about other things. The immediate pressures of rising bills and job insecurity have pushed many longer-term, more abstract priorities, such as constitutional reform and action on climate change, down the agenda. We understand that what could seem a technical change to the voting system does not grab people's attention, but it should do.

The alternative vote is not perfection, or a magic solution to the problem of disillusionment with politics. Yet it is an important step towards a better democracy that empowers the voter, and so deserves our wholehearted support.

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