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Constitutional Design of Electoral Governance in Federal States

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 November 2021

Michael Pal*
Affiliation:
Associate Professor, Faculty of Common Law, University of Ottawa
*
Corresponding author. E-mail: mpal@uottawa.ca
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Abstract

This article explores the constitutional politics of electoral governance in federations by focusing on the role of election commissions, drawing mainly on examples from Asia. All democracies face the challenge of insulating electoral governance from interference and capture. Compared to unitary states, federations confront the additional dilemma of how to disperse authority over electoral governance across multiple orders of government. Federal democracies must decide whether electoral governance should be a matter for the center or the states. I argue that the basic choice is between what I will call the ‘unitary model’ and the ‘division of powers model.’ The main institution of electoral governance is the electoral management body or ‘EMB.’ In the unitary model, a central EMB administers both national and state-level elections. In the ‘division of powers model’, both a central and state-level EMBs exist, with the state commissions administering elections in the component units of the federation. In federal democracies generally, but especially in Asia, the allure of the unitary model has been strong. The article draws on the example of the Constituent Assembly in India to illustrate what is at stake in how federal constitutions allocate authority over electoral governance.

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Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the National University of Singapore

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References

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56 Catt and others (n 6). On Latin America, see Fabrice E. Lehoucq, ‘Can Parties Police Themselves? Electoral Governance and Democratization’ 23(1) International Political Science Review 29 and Hartlyn, Jonathan, McCoy, Jennifer, and Mustillo, Thomas M., ‘Electoral Governance Matters: Explaining the Quality of Elections in Contemporary Latin America’ (2008) 41(1Comparative Political Studies 73CrossRefGoogle Scholar. On Africa, see Mozaffar, Shaheen, ‘Patterns of Electoral Governance in Africa's Emerging Democracies’ (2002) 23(1) International Political Science Review 85CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Makulilo, Alexander and others, Election Management Bodies in East Africa (Open Society Foundations 2015)Google Scholar; Open Society Initiative of Southern Africa, Election Management Bodies in Southern Africa (Open Society Initiative for Southern Africa 2016); Ismaila Madior Fall, Election Management Bodies in West Africa (Open Society Foundations 2012). On South Asia, see Michael Pal, ‘The South Asian Fourth Branch: Designing Election Commissions for Constitutional Resilience’ (in press).

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61 James (n 53) 271. James compares centralized versus decentralized models for election administration across federal and unitary countries. He does not separate out a comparison between federal and unitary systems or centralized and decentralized federations.

62 Both have a central commission and then provincial or state commissions. Information and best practices are shared, but they are distinct entities.

63 Sudhir Krishnaswamy argues in the context of India that ‘a tired air hangs about contemporary academic and professional debates on legal and constitutional federalism’: ‘Constitutional Federalism’ in Tushnet, Mark and Khosla, Madhav (eds) Unstable Constitutionalism: Law and Politics in South Asia (Cambridge University Press 2015), 356CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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68 Constitution of Nepal, parts 21–27. See, for example, Part 22, whereby the Auditor General is granted authority over federal, state, and local government offices: s 241(1). Malagodi, Mara, ‘The Rejection of Constitutional Incrementalism in Nepal's Federalisation’ (2018) 46(4) Federal Law Review 521CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Malagodi, Mara, ‘The Locus of Sovereign Authority in Nepal’ in Tushnet, Mark and Khosla, Madhav (eds), Unstable Constitutionalism: Law and Politics in South Asia (Cambridge University Press 2015) 45Google Scholar.

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74 Voting Rights Act 1965, 42 USC 1973 (a).

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81 Kumar (n 17). Unlike Kumar, I exclude here Iraq, which is sometimes included in analysis of Asian democracy and other times included with countries of the Middle East.

82 ibid 230.

84 The 19th, 20th, 22nd, and 24th Amendments to the Constitution were either partly or entirely preoccupied with electoral matters and were made between 2010 and 2017.

85 Pal (n 11) 105–106.

86 Election Commission of India, ‘The Setup’ (26 October 2018) <https://eci.gov.in/about/about-eci/the-setup-r1/> accessed 22 July 2021.

87 Sauvé v Canada (Chief Electoral Officer), 2002 SCC 68, para 9; Frank v Canada (Attorney General), 2019 SCC 1, para 1.

88 Douglas, Joshua A., ‘The Foundational Importance of Voting: A Response to Professor Flanders’ (2013) 66(1) Oklahoma Law Review 81Google Scholar; Douglas, Joshua A., ‘Is the Right to Vote Really Fundamental’ (2008) 18(1) Cornell Journal of Law and Public Policy 143Google Scholar.

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90 Fishkin (n 89) 1345. See the UN Declaration of Human Rights, art 21(3), referring to ‘universal and equal suffrage.’

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96 Wheare (n 31) 48: ‘Dictatorship, with its one-party government and its denial of free election, is incompatible with the working of the federal principle. Federalism demands forms of government which have the characteristics usually associated with democracy or free government.’

97 James Madison, ‘Federalist No. 10’ in Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay, The Federalist (George Carey and James McClellan eds, Liberty Fund 2001) <https://oll.libertyfund.org/title/jay-the-federalist-gideon-ed#lf1631_label_191>. See also Peter S. Onuf, ‘James Madison's Extended Republic’ (1990) 21 Texas Tech Law Review 2375; Liebman, James S. and Garrett, Brandon L., ‘Madisonian Equal Protection’ (2004) 104(4) Columbia Law Review 837CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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99 ibid; Shani, Ornit, How India Became Democratic: Citizenship and the Making of the Universal Franchise (Cambridge University Press 2018) 185–191Google Scholar.

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103 Lehoucq (n 56).

104 Bhattacharyya (n 13).

105 Jamal Greene and Madhav Khosla, ‘Constitutional Rights in South Asia’ (2018) 16(2) International Journal of Constitutional Law 470, 476. See generally, Mark Tushnet and Madhav Khosla (eds), Unstable Constitutionalism: Law and Politics in South Asia (Cambridge University Press 2015).

106 Shani (n 99) 185: ‘The revised constitutional election provisions aimed to ensure and fortify the autonomy and integrity of the election machinery, and to safeguard and give an explicitly expression to the notion of universal franchise on the basis of a single joint electoral roll.’

107 ibid 191. Madhav Khosla's own account resonates with that of Shani: India's Founding Moment: The Constitution of a Most Surprising Democracy (Harvard University Press 2020), 129–133.

108 ibid 188. The research office of the Constituent Assembly Service looked to the UK, US, South Africa, Australia, Canada, Brazil, Chile, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Nicaragua, Panama, and Uruguay.

109 ibid; Brij Bushan, Constituent Assembly Service, Internal Note of 5 March 1949.

110 Shani (n 99) 188. The U.K. adopted an independent election commission only as late as 2000. Its independence has been watered down to some extent through a revised appointment process. See James, Toby, ‘Electoral Modernisation or Elite Statecraft? Electoral Administration in the U.K. 1997–2007’ (2010) 5(2) British Politics 179CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

111 Jon Soske, ‘The Other Prince, Ambedkar, Constitutional Democracy, and the Agency of the Law’ in Cosimo Zene (ed) The Political Philosophies of Antonio Gramsci and B.R. Ambedkar (Routledge 2013) 59.

112 ibid 64. One could also see Ambedkar's contributions here in light of his overall advocacy for a form of ‘constitutional morality.’ See Constituent Assembly Debates, 4 November 1948 and 25 November 1949; Sujit Choudhry, Madhav Khosla, and Pratap Bhanu Mehta, ‘Locating Indian Constitutionalism’ in Sujit Choudhry, Madhav Khosla, and Pratap Bhanu Mehta (eds) The Oxford Handbook of the Indian Constitution (Oxford University Press 2016), 2–4.

113 Constituent Assembly Debates, 15 June 1949.

114 K.H. Cheluva Raju, ‘Dr. B.R. Ambedkar and Making of the Constitution: A Case Study of Indian Federalism’ (1991) 52(2) Indian Journal of Political Science 153, 158 covers the emphasis by Ambedkar and others on ‘a strong Center….’.

115 Soske (n 111) 64. Ambedkar cannot be accused of being hostile to the recognition of difference in constitutional design. He supported separate constituencies for Muslims in India in the Constituent Assembly, though ultimately lost the argument. See Raja Sekhar Vundru, Ambedkar, Gandhi, and Patel: The Making of India's Electoral System (Bloomsbury 2018) and Khosla (n 107) 129–133.

116 Khosla (n 107) 36. A weakness in Article 324 evident to some participants in the Constituent Assembly Debates was the appointment process. Prof. Shiban Lal Saxena worried about capture of the ECI through appointments made formally by the President but informally by the Prime Minister. He therefore advocated a requirement of 2/3 support in both houses of Parliament so as to avoid appointment of any ‘party man’ who would act counter to ‘independence and impartiality of the Election Commission.’ Constituent Assembly Debates, 15 June 1949.

117 Rosalind Dixon and David Landau develop the concept of constitutional ‘abuse’ in a series of works. Constitutional abuse can stem from judicial review: ‘Abusive Judicial Review: Courts Against Democracy’ (2020) 53(3) UC Davis Law Review 1313. It can also be carried out by the executive or legislature, especially through constitutional borrowing: ‘1989–2019: From Democratic to Abusive Constitutional Borrowing’ (2019) 17(2) International Journal of Constitutional Law.

118 ‘The first reason is that this is a matter which requires careful consideration and that it has been hinted in a section of the press that in some provinces the Governments are helping the registration of their own supporters.’ Shri Pataskar, Constituent Assembly Debates, 15 June 1949.

119 Shani (n 99) 18.

120 ibid.

121 ibid.

122 ibid 185.

123 K.M. Munshi, Constituent Assembly Debates, 16 June 1949. See Shani (n 99) 192 for a discussion of the context.

124 Khaitan, Tarun, ‘Killing a Constitution with a Thousand Cuts: Executive Aggrandizement and Party-State Fusion in India’ (2020) 14(1) Law and Ethics of Human Rights 49CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

125 Nazifa Alizada and others, Autocratization Turns Viral: Democracy Report 2021 (Gothenburg, V-Dem Institute 2021) 13. India is now classified by V-Dem as an ‘electoral autocracy.’

126 Khaitan (n 124).

127 Ganguly, Sumit, ‘An Illiberal India?’ (2020) 31(1) Journal of Democracy 193CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

128 Pal (n 11).

129 Tushnet, ‘Institutions Protecting Constitutional Democracy’ (n 11) 105–106.

130 See Mohsin Alam Bhat, ‘Governing Democracy Outside the Law: India's Election Commission and the Challenge of Accountability’ in this special issue for an in-depth analysis of the role of the ECI.