Abstract

In November 1993, 100 years after becoming the first nation to enfranchise women, New Zealand again made electoral reform history as its citizens voted by a 54–46 margin to replace their venerable, U.S.-style first-past-the-post (FPP) method of electing legislators with a new mixed-member proportional (MMP) system. Political scientists in the United States and elsewhere may find New Zealand's decision instructive in six ways:• as a harbinger of a wider movement toward electoral reform in established democracies and of a global trend toward mixed-member legislatures;• as a demonstration of how constitutional reform can overcome entrenched interests;• as a symptom of political backlash against the imposition of orthodox economic policies of the sort advocated by the IMF and other international agencies;• as a partial repudiation of the Westminster model that U.S. reformers have often taken as their ideal;• as the source of a new method of ensuring fair and effective representation for a minority ethnic group; and• as an example of how political scientists can play influential roles as institutional designers and public educators.

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