With the dust settling
on last week’s Senedd election, it’s opportune to review how well the new
system of voting actually worked. No doubt the academics are already hard at
work on a detailed analysis of the results and the factors which led people to
vote as they did. One obvious weakness is that the system ended up favouring
the largest parties, encouraging a degree of polarisation between them, just as
first past the post has long done. And for all the talk of ‘every vote counts’,
clearly some votes did not count; the lack of an opportunity to express a
second or third choice meant that the votes of those whose first choice was
rapidly eliminated ultimately counted for nothing. And then there’s the argument
about voting for a party rather than a person – I’m personally not convinced of
that, although many others are, because years of campaigning told me that most
people vote for the party anyway. Overall, it’s produced a more proportional
result than the previous system, but it’s not ideal.
Some
have criticised Labour and Plaid for introducing the new system, describing it
as some sort of stitch-up. Criticism of Labour is fair, but I’m not convinced
that the same is true of Plaid. Multi-party politics with no overall majority
requires compromise and agreement, and had Plaid not agreed to support Labour
on this detail, we probably wouldn’t have had the other changes to the Senedd.
With a super-majority required for such a change, it looked like a worthwhile
compromise – provided it doesn’t become the norm for the longer term.
Most
supporters
of Proportional Representation tend to favour the Single Transferable Vote.
Looking at the new Senedd, that’s true of Plaid, the Lib Dems, and the Greens –
but those three parties together do not have the votes for a supermajority on
this issue, and Labour and the Tories are generally opposed. Enter, stage
right, Reform Ltd. It’s always hard to know what the company’s policy is on any
issue because it keeps changing, but Farage (the ultimate determiner of all policies, as the owner and proprietor)
has in the past been supportive of a move to STV. Whether he still supports
that (given how well his company did in England under FPTP) is an open
question, but if he does, there is a clear supermajority in favour in the new
Senedd. It creates a potential opportunity for a change with long-lasting
effect.
It’s clearly not
going to be the top priority for the incoming government. There are far more urgent
priorities in areas such as health and education, where visible change is
urgently required. Electoral Reform is top of few people’s lists. I hope,
though, that the new government will find time to discuss this with other
parties – yes, including Reform Ltd – during the current Senedd term, while the
door might be at least ajar. Thursday’s results were historic, there is no doubt
about that. But historic isn’t the same as irreversible. Sometimes phoenixes do
rise out of the ashes, and the Labour and Conservative parties in Wales might
not be quite as moribund as they currently appear to be.