Blair Wilson, the Green Party, and Elizabeth May lusting for a TV spot
History has been made today. The Green Party has an MP in Canada's parliament.
Well, technically, the Green Party has an MP who is ready to sit in parliament, though it is unlikely parliament will sit before an election is called.
Indeed, after all is said and done, the Green Party might come out of all this never have had a sitting MP.
And certainly not an elected MP.
That might not matter much to some people, but I think these are more than just subtle distinctions.
The Green Party has an MP in parliament!
Green Party leader Elizabeth May is welcoming MP Blair Wilson to the Green Party as the first Green Member of Parliament in Canada.
Mr. Wilson, MP for West Vancouver—Sunshine Coast—Sea to Sky Country, will serve in the Green Party Shadow Cabinet.
Relax, the Green Party has not garnered enough votes to win a riding. But Blair Wilson, the Liberal MP tossed out of the party for not having disclosed his numerous legal problems, has switched to the Green Party.
Does that earn Elizabeth May a spot in the leader's debate?
It seems like the only specific reason Blair Wilson can name for sitting as a Green Party MP (if parliament sits again before an election is called) is so that he can affect the leader's debate in an upcoming election. Indeed, he obliquely suggests it is an act of mischief aimed at the Liberal Party:
Mr. Wilson has served as an Independent MP since autumn of 2007.
“Not only do I embrace the policies of my new party, I will feel that all my past difficulties are justified if, by my actions, I can make a real difference by ensuring Elizabeth May is included in the leaders’ debates,” said Mr. Wilson. “There is a democracy deficit in Canadian politics and this is one step in restoring effective democracy in Canada.
Elizabeth May also seems to value Blair Wilson mostly as a ticket to a TV appearance:
“Today we make history,” said Ms. May. “I am grateful for Mr. Wilson’s principled belief that the Green Party deserves a voice in Parliament and for his firm commitment to democracy. With a Green MP sitting in the House of Commons, it will now be impossible to exclude the Green Party from the televised leaders’ debates in the next election.
As impossibilities go, the only one I see is the impossible task, so far, of electing a Green Party member of parliament.
Should that matter? I think so, and I've always maintained that our first-past-the-post system is a great filter for eliminating noise in our political process.
Here is what I wrote about mixed member proportional representation:
I don't look at a body like a legislature as the political expression of the collective will of the people. I leave that to philosophers and other chronically unemployed types.
I work for a living. I get things done. And for that I need power. Power drives a system. But it has to be clean power. Filtered power.
I look at everything as systems, with inputs, outputs, feedback loops, memory, and a source of power. It's an engineering thing, but it works for me.
So what does this have to do with legislatures and voting schemes? A legislature is a system which outputs governance for a society. A machine for making laws. That machine needs power, and in a democracy, that power is derived from the popular will of the people.
The challenge, though, is to provide clean filtered power. Imagine a lamp (a machine for making light) being powered by a power source in which the voltage varies randomly and the current switches direction with wild abandon. The light would be bright, dim, off, flickering, steady -- all over the place and utterly useless.
If we tried to work a legislature off of the popular will as measured moment by moment, it would be the same thing.
So we apply filters (just as power supplies are filtered in any electrical circuit).
The filters include elections every four years (in the normal course of events), representative democracy, riding-based elections, and so on.
A party has to prove itself able to get a sizeable fraction of the voters in a riding, made up of a mix of urban and rural voters, men and women, families and single people, rich and poor, religious and atheist, and so on and so forth, to vote for the candidate. If the candidate succeeds at that better than the candidates of the other parties, that party is rewarded with an MP in parliament.
And how does this concern the Green Party?
The Green Party has never won a seat. Well, many of their policies are already reflected in the policies of other parties. Other Green policies can't find enough traction with voters. They simply can't earn enough votes as a standalone party to win a seat. That puts the onus on them to construct policies that are more appealing to a broad cross-section of voters you would find in any given riding.
Will the Green Party succeed at that? Quite possibly. I'd guess in another couple of elections, but that will have a lot to do with what happens to the Bloc Quebecois, the NDP, and the Liberal Party in the next few years. Those parties are natural reservoirs of potential Green Party voters, and if any of those parties break down or even dissolve, the Green Party could benefit in subsequent elections.
And of course, the evolution of Green Party policies will play a big role in attracting enough voters in a riding to win a seat.
Electing an MP is tough. Only four parties can manage it today, and one of them focuses all its efforts exclusively in one province.
The Green Party is not one these parties. That an MP who was elected in a riding running on an entirely different platform is now deciding to call himself a Green Party MP doesn't mean that Elizabeth May gets to present a Green Party platform at a leader's debate, a debate about platforms.
The leader's debate will be rendered useless if there is too much noise. So far, the Green Party has not proven that its contribution to Canadian political debate amounts to much more than just noise. Snatching a disgraced MP on the eve of an election does not change that.
When the Green Party platform succeeds at winning over a riding, then we'll talk. Until that happens, I have to say that Elizabeth May has failed to prove, in the only way that matters, that her party's platform deserves to be presented and debated at the leader's debate.
Technicalities: When does an MP actually get recognized as being a member of a particular party? Is there a formal process, perhaps involving the Clerk of the House of Commons, so that the MP is noted as being a member of this party or that, assigned an appropriate seat, and so on? Clearly Blair Wilson will not have party status -- whatever party affiliation he claims to have, the Green Party will not be a formal party in the House of Commons, with a research budget, seats on committees, and an allotment of time during Question Period. Functionally, Blair Wilson is still an independent. If an election is called before parliament sits again, can Blair Wilson even be correctly referred to as a sitting Green Party MP? Can the Green Party say that it has ever had an MP in parliament, elected or otherwise? I haven't found any reference to how all this works, but I think it's an interesting set of questions.
Precedents: From Daimnation:
I see Janke's point, and I'm not anxious to give the Green Party even more exposure. That said, in 1993 Preston Manning was included in the debates despite there being only one Reform Party MP (albeit an elected one) and Lucien Bouchard was allowed to participate even though the Bloc caucus was made up almost entirely of floor-crossers.
Albeit an elected Reform Party member? Well, that's the point, isn't it. Deb Grey ran in fourth place in the 1988 election in riding of Beaver River as the candidate for the Reform Party. Preston Manning was not in the debate. Then in 1989, Deb Grey won the by-election in that riding (the winner, Progressive Conservative John Dahmer having died before he could be sworn in). In the next general election in 1993, Preston Manning was invited to participate, since clearly the Reform Party platform resonated at the federal level and could win over a plurality of voters in a riding.
The same applied for Lucien Bouchard. The Bloc Quebecois was made up almost entirely of floor crossers -- except for Gilles Duceppe, who won the by-election in Laurier-Sainte-Marie in 1990. Having proven, in principle, that the Bloc Quebecois platform was one that could win an electoral fight, Lucien Bouchard was invited to participate in the 1993 leader's debate.
Elizabeth May and her Green Party haven't managed that feat yet.