The Electoral Reforms in Patterns of Democracy by Arend Lijphart

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In his book ‘Patterns of Democracy’, Arend Lijphart mentions how electoral systems of majoritarian and consensus model of democracies differ. The electoral systems in majoritarian democracies quintessentially tend to be single-member district plurality system, while consensus democracies usually tend to use the method of proportional representation. Most electoral systems fit into the two categories of PR and plurality-majority. However, there do exist some electoral systems that fall in between. These are called semi proportional formulas and Japan with its SNTV system is an example of this approach. From 1947 to 1993 Japan had a very unique electoral system called the single nontransferable vote or simply SNTV. Under this system, voters could cast their votes for individual, and the candidates with the most votes win. The voters do not have as many votes as there are seats in the district, and the districts have to have at least two seats.

However, in the year 1996, a new policy was introduced, known as the PR or proportional representation. Its main aim was to change single-party dominance that had been observed in Japan over the years and to help represent both majorities and minorities, and to translate votes into seats proportionally. PR was a system where in the citizens were no longer required to choose a candidate, but a particular party, during the elections. PR and SNTV both require multimember districts and it is an accepted fact that district magnitude has an on the degree of disproportionality. It has a strong influence in both PR and SNTV systems, but in opposite directions. Whilst in the SNTV system, increasing the district magnitude involves greater disproportionality and greater advantages for large parties, un...

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...he candidate with the most votes wins and it doesn’t matter whether the candidate’s party is popular or not.

Factionalism was yet another aspect of Japanese political parties and even now, when the political policy has been changed, it still exists. Each individual candidate usually maintains a core group of followers called a faction or a koenkai. Koenkai members are loyal to individual politicians, not necessarily to parties or to political ideals. The size and activeness of a candidates’ koenkai is what determines how many supporters will actually turn out to vote. Thus, voters are mobilized by organizations such as local agricultural cooperatives, small businessmen’s associations, or neighborhood associations.

Therefore, clientelism, personalism, and rural capture were products of the electoral system of single non-transferable vote in a multi-member district.

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