Ekklesia: more Christians saying Yes! To Fairer Votes

YES to Fairer VotesLast week I wrote Towards a Christian view on the Alternative Vote not least because I had not seen any other argument on this matter from a Christian perspective. But perhaps that is because I hadn’t been looking far enough. I have now discovered that the Christian think-tank Ekklesia is committed to the cause of electoral reform, to the extent that their co-director Jonathan Bartley has been seconded to be one of the main leaders of the Yes! To Fairer Votes campaign.

Bartley’s co-director Simon Barrow has outlined Ekklesia’s position, and Bartley’s role, in an article Supporting the case for Fairer Votes. This article goes into theological issues only where it quotes a more detailed paper by Barrow from 2009, The state of independents: alternative politics. Most of this paper is not directly relevant to the Alternative Vote referendum this May. But it does offer some significant insights, such as:

Ekklesia is a Christian-based think-tank and believes strongly that the challenge for Christians is to find a new way of engaging with people and with power which will change the rules of the game – from self-interest to concern for our neighbours; from organised hatred to enemy-loving; from punitive to restorative action; from trying to ‘be in control’ of others to seeking the invitation of persuasive example, and so on. …A healthy democratic system – one that is open to change, criticism, renewal and a wide base of participation and decision-making – is positive for all of us. Of course, it will not resolve our differences nor will it alone produce the change of hearts, minds and lives which Christians (and others) argue is what real transformation in the public and inter-personal realm requires. Something more is needed for that. But it does give us a framework in which to ‘do business’.

Christian hope and commitment points towards the creation of public places where political competition is displaced by neighbourly affection, based on the voluntary but deeply-rooted commitments of ‘communities of principle’ (ekklesia).

The paper is not specifically referring to the Alternative Vote, but it could have been, when it concludes:

Here is a chance to do things differently, to challenge what St Paul once condemned as ‘party spirit’ and listed as a destructive impulse alongside ‘selfish ambition’. He was thinking of factionalism within the church. But this is a shared human failing. What we need instead is a shared human opportunity to take our politics, our participation and ourselves in a fresh direction.

Indeed! This material from Ekklesia is still not really a theological defence of the Yes! to Fairer Votes campaign. But it does provide a strong basis on which such a defence could be based.

I would expect to find more relevant material in Jonathan Bartley’s books The Subversive Manifesto: Lifting the Lid on God’s Political Agenda (2003) and Faith and Politics After Christendom: The Church as a Movement for Anarchy (2006). But I have not read these books. (At the Ekklesia site the link to the former is uninformative and the link to the latter gives a message “You are not authorized to access this page”, so I have linked instead to their pages at amazon.co.uk.) Sadly Jonathan seems to have been too busy with the Yes! campaign to write anything more recent from an explicitly Christian perspective. But his role within the campaign should ensure that this Christian viewpoint is not ignored or lost.

UPDATE less than an hour after posting: Jonathan Bartley replied quickly to my e-mail linking to this post. He included a reminder that ten Church of England bishops have come out in support of the Alternative Vote, as reported by The Guardian. Among the bishops quoted is the blogger Alan Wilson. While Bartley is quoted as saying that the bishops were backing change on moral and ethical grounds, sadly there is nothing more in the article that goes beyond the standard politicians’ arguments. The next day Bishop Alan blogged on Are voting systems moral?, which he concluded with:

So by all means let’s have a discussion about voting systems. I wonder what general moral principles we will be using as we take our positions. The answer “None, because this is about politics” strikes me as distinctly weedy, nasty people would suggest “sub-Christian.”

Indeed. But it would have been nice to see Bishop Alan starting that discussion by properly explaining his own position.

0 thoughts on “Ekklesia: more Christians saying Yes! To Fairer Votes

  1. Thanks, Peter for picking this up. I was calling in th resources to describe the moral parameters for a debate, rather than giving an answer. I am sure good Christians can argue on equally moral grounds for all sorts of other systems of government and voting. However, in moral terms, I think the sort of ballpark we could be in is about, assuming as we do that democracy is more moral than autocracy or oligarchy (which is by no means ultimately certain, some may say)…

    (1) Justice weighs whatever votes we have in a way that recognises each voter as equally made in the image of God

    (2) A theology of the Holy Spirit in which God involves himself in the wisdom that emerges from a crowd as surely as the wisdom of a single individual

    (3) God is no respecter of persons, says James. Therefore any system that concentrates power in the hands of a clique is worse than one that reflects the desire of all as fully as possible

    (4) Jotham’s Fable in the book of Judges poses questions that still fascinate me whenever I think about them about how and why we weild power among ourselves. I’d love to see a really good exposition of what it could mean in this debate.

    (5) Trying to bring in the Romans 13 etc “powers that be allowed by God” theology, everything is provisional. Therefore the system is to be weighed in terms of its own merits not in terms of its outcomes. The principle of double effect, classical tool of Christian moral thought, would imply this anyway.

    I don’t know; there are a few starter areas in terms of which to explore this. Any good?

  2. The Yes! to Fairer Votes Campaign has today published an interesting article Faith groups unite for AV as desperate No attack backfires. Bishop Alan Wilson gets a mention in the following part:

    Scientist and prominent atheist Richard Dawkins commented to the Independent newspaper today that “I am at a loss to understand how any reasonable person can defend first past the post. AV should be supported by every democrat.”

    This prompted the Bishop of Buckingham Alan Wilson to say “It doesn’t often happen, but I strongly agree with Richard on this one — we may differ on why the cosmos came into being, but it’s good we can agree on how our little corner of it should work democratically.”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*
To prove you're a person (not a spam script), type the security word shown in the picture. Click on the picture to hear an audio file of the word.
Anti-spam image