April 25, 2012
PETALING
JAYA, April 25 — The Election Commission’s (EC) drawing of electoral
boundaries makes a rural voter worth an average of six urban voters,
biasing elections towards Barisan Nasional (BN) as it is stronger in the
countryside, according to poll analysts.
Election watchdog Tindak Malaysia founder PY Wong said the ruling
coalition won 112 out of the smallest 139 federal seats in Election
2008, giving it simple majority in Parliament with just 18.9 per cent of
the popular vote. The seats have not been changed for the next general
election.
“Something is seriously wrong when you can win 50.4 per cent of
Parliament with just 18.9 per cent of the votes,” he told a forum here
last night.
Wong said malapportionment — unequally-sized constituencies — and
gerrymandering — manipulation of electoral boundaries — also allowed the
ruling coalition to rack up 62 of the smallest seats with just 6.2 per
cent of the popular vote.
Something is seriously wrong when you can win 50.4 per cent of Parliament with just 18.9 per cent of the votes
He pointed out how the smallest federal seat was Putrajaya, won by
BN, with 6,008 voters, while Kapar, won by PKR, had over 112,000.
Another analyst, Wong Chin Huat, pointed out that the smallest 112 seats only represented 33.8 per cent of the electorate.
The Bersih steering committee member said this allowed for the
lopsided results in 2004, where BN won 90.9 per cent of Parliament with
just 63.9 per cent of the popular vote, while Datuk Seri Dr Wan Azizah
Wan Ismail was PKR’s sole MP despite gaining 8.4 per cent of votes cast.
“This means one vote for BN was worth 26 votes for PKR,” he said.
Chin Huat said malapportionment and gerrymandering have been made
easier after a constitutional provision, which stated the largest and
smallest seats may only have a 15 per cent differential, was amended in
1962 to 50 per cent and then abolished completely in 1973.
The lecturer at Monash University, Sunway, said Bersih proposed to
solve the rural bias by ensuring that the maximum size of the largest
state seat can only be half of the smallest federal seat.
“If they have small rural parliamentary seats, this will only create
many urban state seats and give urban voters control of the state
governments. By linking Parliament and state seats, you avoid the bias,”
he said.
Pakatan Rakyat (PR) denied BN its customary two-thirds supermajority
of Parliament at the last general election by capturing 82 federal seats
and five state governments.
Although the opposition coalition marginally won the popular vote in
Peninsular Malaysia, it only took 80 out of the 166 federal seats
available there. But it has now lost six seats as the winning lawmakers
have turned independent and support BN in parliament.
Bersih will hold a sit-in rally this weekend to press its demands for
electoral reforms despite a parliamentary select committee (PSC) making
its recommendations to the EC.
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