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Direct
access to the media in election campaign
A review & recommendations for Zimbabwe
Media
Monitoring Project Zimbabwe
November 30, 2001
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If private
advertising is allowed, will any limit be placed on the amount of
advertising allowed for each candidate?
Few
countries allow totally unrestricted spending on political advertising.
The United States, where the system is relatively unregulated, still
makes campaigns subject to strict laws on financing (which affects
TV advertising in particular as the largest item in the campaign
budget). Canada also has paid advertising during elections, but
has a system similar to that which relegates free direct access
in many countries, which sets a limit to the amount that any party
may spend. Barbados, which allows candidates to top up their free
access with paid advertising, nevertheless sets limits on how much
can be bought.
MMPC Recommends
- If paid political
advertising were to be allowed in broadcasting (which MMPZ regards
as an undesirable option) then strict limits should be placed
on spending.
- In any event,
all sources of campaign funding should be made public. Failure
to publish audited campaign accounts should be a criminal offence.
If free direct
access is allowed, how will it be decided what time or space is
allocated?
There
are broadly two systems of allocating free direct access time or
space:
- A system
of equality – all parties or candidates receive the same
amount.
- A system
of equity (or fairness) – all parties or candidates receive
a fair amount.
The argument
in favour of an equality system is that every party gets a chance
to put its view across. It will then be the electorate that chooses,
rather than the electoral authority or the state broadcaster. This
is a particularly popular system in a country’s first democratic
election when no one is sure how much support the different parties
enjoy.
But the argument
against equality is that it always favours the incumbent party,
since it promotes no-hope opposition parties and minimizes access
for those parties that might actually topple the incumbent. There
is also the danger that it encourages frivolous candidates who are
merely seeking the free publicity. Also, if all parties have equal
access there may be more information than the electorate can take
in – again this will be most likely to favour the incumbent.
Equality tends
to be more popular in presidential elections, where the choice is
simpler than in parliamentary elections that might involve party
lists and complicated systems of transferring votes. Thus countries
like Brazil and France operate a system of equality in presidential
elections. Denmark, Norway, the Netherlands and the Italian public
broadcaster (all long-established democracies) operate systems of
equal access. Some of these countries, however, operate a threshold
system, whereby a party has to gain a certain level of public support
before it has the opportunity of equal direct access time.
The alternative
system of equity also has arguments in its favour. It means that
parties are able to speak to the electorate roughly in proportion
to the amount of support they enjoy. The electorate thus gets to
hear the arguments between the main contenders for office.
The main disadvantage
of the equity system is that it may be an obstacle to the emergence
of new parties. However, the equity system can be modified to make
sure that all parties or candidates get at least some direct access
time.
There is no
right or wrong answer to which approach is best. These are some
considerations:
- Equality
may work better when there are fewer parties or candidates. When
there are too many then the "cake" may have to be cut into impossibly
tiny slices, or made so large that there is too much election
broadcasting for anyone to take in.
- Equality
may work better in a new or "transitional" democracy. This perhaps
contradicts the previous point, since new democracies often have
many parties (and ruling parties in new democracies may encourage
this). But the point is that if there has been no previous democratic
election, then there will be no commonly agreed measure of how
much popular support each party has.
- Conversely,
equity may work better in an established democracy where there
are clear measures of past electoral support. Or are the equality
advocates right, and does this just obstruct the emergence of
new political alternatives?
But these are
only pointers. As indicated, many established democracies use the
equality system. And new democracies, including Namibia and South
Africa, have used the equity system.
MMPC Recommends
- Zimbabwe
should adopt an equity system for allocating direct access broadcasting
time. However, this system should contain a substantial allocation
of time for new parties or candidates
The system adopted
in South Africa, which MMPZ believes is a good one, takes three
elements into account in allocating direct access time:
- All parties
or candidates receive a basic allocation, regardless of past support
or how many candidates they are fielding.
- Parties or
candidates receive an additional allocation based upon past electoral
support.
- And they
receive an additional allocation based upon the number of candidates
they are fielding.
MMPC Recommends
- MMPZ recommends
that such a system is adopted in future for Zimbabwe’s parliamentary
elections. For presidential elections, the third element does
not apply. Therefore MMPZ recommends that all presidential candidates
should receive a basic allocation of direct access time. This
should be substantially topped up with time allocated in proportion
to the votes cast for each candidate’s party in the last parliamentary
elections.
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