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Selecting candidates: who do we want, and how do we get them?

EqualitiesBy Mark Rusling

Political parties may face mandatory quotas for selecting female Parliamentary candidates if the representation of women does not improve at this year’s general election. Monday’s proposal from the cross-party Speaker’s Conference on increasing the representation of women, ethnic minorities and disabled people in the House of Commons is certain to be controversial, particularly in Labour.

We remain the only party to have tried seriously to increase our number of female MPs. 27% of current Labour MPs are women, which compares well with Lib Dems’ 14% and the Tories’ disgraceful 9%. This welcome rise in the number of female Labour MPs has been achieved partly through a deeply controversial all-women shortlist policy. The Speaker’s Conference suggestion takes this party policy one step further by adding quotas to all-women shortlists.

Responding to the proposal, Harriet Harman recognised “the real need to build on the desire for greater representation in our democratic structures”. All-women shortlists have certainly increased the representation of women (Labour women, anyway). But have they increased democracy? Those of us who back all-women shortlists must surely accept that they are a trade-off: representation is enhanced at the expense of democracy.    

Taking it further, how democratic would it be to impose candidate quotas on parties? This goes to the very heart of the way in which we select our candidates. We want to maintain the right of local members to select local candidates, but we also want to achieve a representative gender and ethnic balance. The two frequently conflict: it is impossible to achieve a national balance from 650 separate local selection processes. Achieving a national balance will require a national strategy, not ad hoc responses to local selections.

While all-women shortlists may be good for improving representation (and nobody has found a more effective way of increasing the number of female MPs), they do not enhance democracy. Equally, 650 local selections may be paragons of internal party democracy, but they also produce a list of candidates entirely unrepresentative of the country as a whole.

At the moment, the decision to go for an all-women shortlist is neither transparent, nor democratic. We adhere to the notion of internal democracy, yet subvert this in what often appears to be a random edict from on high. Nobody doubts that securing greater numbers of female MPs is a noble aim, but we need to have a debate over where we draw the line between representation and democracy.

If we are serious about presenting voters with 650 candidates who are truly representative of the country as a whole – and we should be – we will have to accept the inevitable trade-off that this will entail for internal party democracy. The decisions which are taken out of the hands of local parties must be made for reasons which can be debated, by individuals who can be questioned.

The Speaker’s Conference proposals are a decent starting point for this debate. They may not be the final word on the issue, but they at least shine a clear light on a decision which can be fudged no longer – we need a national strategy for achieving a representative PLP. And we must accept that the purest internal democracy will not lead us to a PLP that looks like the country we seek to serve.

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Posted on Jan 15, 2010 at 10:50am


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I have very mixed views about the 'All woman shortlists.' Personally, like Morys, if I had gained any success in my life based upon positive discrimination, I would always have the feeling that I may not have been the best person for the job. Would I want to live with that feeling? Probably not, I’d prefer to be discriminated against in the normal way and live with the false hope that the man that got the job was better than me.

However, society is unequal in many ways but gender inequality is perhaps the most glaring. Tackling inequality requires radical solutions. In 50 years time when women are being democratically elected on merit, and in equal measure to their male counterparts then history will show that the policy was an historic and radical success. It will be worth it.

It just may not feel like that right now.....
Stephanie Gee @ 32 weeks and 6 days ago
Hi Charlie

Thanks , I would hate to see what my uneducated status would be :)

danny
ricki lake @ 32 weeks and 6 days ago
I suppose to middle class university educated types PPE would stand for the notorious Oxford University course that too many MPs have taken - namely, Philosophy, Politics and Economic.

To the people of Copeland - and more specifically the Sellafield workforce - the meaning of PPE is obvious: Personal Protective Equipment. It's what you wear at work to protect yourself from radiation. AWS would probably be assumed to be a typo - ASWs (Agency Supplied Workers) are in plentiful supply at Sellafield and do not have near;y enough employment rights compared to permanent staff.

I hope I hsve demonstrated that issues of diversity are enormously more complex than race, gender and sexual orientation. If you want to represent a parliementary constituency as an MP you need to speak the same language as the people you want to represent.
Rachel Stalker @ 32 weeks and 6 days ago
Hi Charlie

what are PPes ?


Danny
ricki lake @ 32 weeks and 6 days ago
Hi Danny, PPEs are Politcs Philosophy and Economics degrees (usually from Oxford) which show the unfortunate recipient decided they wanted a career in poking their noses into other people's lives when they chose their A-levels at the age of 15. Usually means they are over-privileged, middle-class and never had a proper job. Can you tell I'm not a fan? (o;
Charlie Farley @ 32 weeks and 6 days ago
Three bad things:

1/ AWS

2/ PPE

3/ Middle-class Lord/Lady Bountiful types.
Charlie Farley @ 32 weeks and 6 days ago
Hi Labourlist

Wouldnt open primaries solve this and let local people chose the best candidate ?

If we go down the route of chossing on stats , why arnt we setting a quota on people with convictions , or people who are gay? why is it down to gender and race ? why not hieght? Hair colour? Or why dont we trust local people choose be the ballot box?

Danny
ricki lake @ 32 weeks and 6 days ago
The ends which I hope we support do not justify the means. Often the means are manipulated at the centre (e.g. Maggie Jones, South Wales)to parachute annoited daughters onto unwilling constituencies.

If the objective is a representative parliament when are we going to do something about the fact that 25% of MPs are drawn from less than 1% of adults of voting age who were educated at Oxbridge. I am all for increasing the number of women in parliament but I am also for reducing the size of the Oxbridge "lodge".

Taking Denham at his word of adopting a more sophisticated approach to discrimination how do we balance off gender disadvantage against social advantage or in the case of Oxbridge crude preferrment?

Colin
Colin Adkins @ 32 weeks and 6 days ago
while we are at it why dont we have a no barrister shortlist, no policy wonk shortlist, no think tank member shortlist and a no teacher shortlist?

All vastly over-represented sections of society. Surely this is indefensible?
King Kong @ 32 weeks and 6 days ago
This is certainly a noble cause, but I don't see the trade off as an acceptable one. Personally I would not want to be one of those candidates elected through such a system, knowing that I had gained my position, at least in part, by virtue of my race or gender. I'm not sure that creating further discrimination, albeit so-called 'positive discrimination', is the way to a more equal society.

Morys Ireland @ 32 weeks and 6 days ago
"I would not want to be one of those candidates elected through such a system, knowing that I had gained my position, at least in part, by virtue of my race or gender."

In general this argument could also be applied inversely, e.g. Males that are elected do so due to an inherent discrimination in the system.

I see no reason why Women or people from ethnic minorities should think less of their achievements whilst those who have historically benefited from this discrimination feel no sense of inadequacy.

Postive discrimination is a crude but effective way to equalise society, currently it is the only tool we have. Trickle down policies like doing nothing will not have enough impact to resolve the issue.

When it comes to this country, as a man I do not mind all women shortlists. My only concern and (this goes for male MP's as well as female) is that they are of good quality, not mindless automatons like some of the members of our PLP.
Nadeem Backus @ 32 weeks and 6 days ago