THE CUMULATIVE VOTE.
An explanation has been asked of the term " cumulative vote," aa used in the recent debate in the Assembly on the Education Bill, and we publish the following extract on the subject : — " We trust that, in any reform of our electoral system, advantage will be taken of the experience acqui *ed, both in England and America, of the admirable working of the cumulative principle. Theoretically it has received the approval of some of the greatest statesmen and thinkers of the present day because it is an eminently democratic principle, and is the inevitable corollary of universal suffrage; since, as Mr. John Stuart Mill has pointed out, ' even the government of mere numbers requires in the strict sense of the word, unless that every number should tell in proportion to its amount' while there can be no true representation of the people, and no popular government, every minority in the constituency is represented by a minority in the representative body. But practically the principle has been tested both m the mother couDtry and ia the United States, and its working has given unqualified - Batieftiction. As our readers are aware, the Imperial Education Act of 1870 contained a clause by which electors were enabled to give their votes cumulatively in electing members of school boards ; each elector being entitled to as many votes as there were members to be chosen and. being at liberty to bestow them all upon one candidate, or to distribute them otherwise 'as be might think fit. In America, we find the cumulative vote introduced into poliric.il, municipal, university, and mercantileelectious,and approved of ay men of all parties' and all grades of society. As we mentioned some months since, the principle has been adopted in the New Constitution of the State of Illinois, each constituency returning three members, and each elector possessing three votes, which he can either be" stow upon one candidate, or divide between two, or distribute ainoniT three. The result is, as acknowledged by Bepublieans and Democrats, that these two parties were never before so proportionally represented in the State Legislature. At the lrst election of " overseers " for the University of Harvard, a similar plan was resorted to with similar success. Not long ago a modification of it was tried in the State of New York, when six Associate Judges of her highest Court had~ to be elected ; each elector being allowed four votes. In Pennsylvania, last year, tlie Bloomsburg town election was conducted on the cumulative principle. Six councillors and a president had to be chosen. Under the old plan of majority voting, we are told, it is doubtful whether a single Democrat would bave beeu ch»sen, because, notwithstanding that party is the moat numerous in the town, the .working men — who constitute about a sixth of the ratepayers — have been accustomed to cast in their vote for the Eepublicans. But the cumulative vote led to the return of four Democrats, two Republicans, and one Republican working man ; and the Council, as thus constituted, represents with the utmost accuracy the state of fe6liug in. the town."
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Tuapeka Times, Volume III, Issue 196, 2 November 1871, Page 8
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515THE CUMULATIVE VOTE. Tuapeka Times, Volume III, Issue 196, 2 November 1871, Page 8
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