Malapportionment is the creation of electoral districts with divergent ratios of voters to representatives. For example, if one single-member district has 10,000 voters and another has 100,000 voters, voters in the former district have ten times the influence, per person, over the governing body. Malapportionment may be deliberate, for reasons such as biasing representation toward geographic areas or a minority over
equality of individuals. For example, in a
federation, each member unit may have the same representation regardless of its population. In some instances sparsely populated rural regions are given intentionally equal representation to densely packed urban areas with higher populations, for example the
United States Senate may reflect results counter to the majority vote. Unequal representation can be measured in the following ways: • By the
ratio of the most populous electoral district to the least populous. In the two figures above, the ratio is 10:1. A ratio approaching 1:1 means there are no anomalies among districts. In India in 1991, a ratio of nearly 50:1 was measured. The
Reynolds v. Sims decision of the
U.S. Supreme Court found ratios of up to 1081:1 in state legislatures. A higher ratio measures the severity of the worst anomalies, but does not indicate whether inequality is prevalent. • By the
standard deviation of the electorates of electoral districts. • Differences in
seats-to-votes ratios. • By the smallest percentage of voters that could win a majority in the governing body due to disparities in the populations of districts. For example, in a 61-member body, this would be half the voters in the 31 districts with the lowest populations. It is persuasive to show that far fewer than 50% of the voters could win a majority in the governing body. But it requires additional research to conclude that such an outcome is realistic: whether the malapportionment is systematic and designed to bias the body, or is the result of random factors that give extra power to voters whose interests are unlikely to coincide. Apportioning by population instead of number of citizens results in malapportionment. Even when electoral districts have similar populations,
gerrymandering may result malapportionment.
Examples of malapportionment Modern bicameral parliaments have often one house representing the population, and a second house representing regions. The regional house in most cases has the same number of deputies from every region, and prevents populous regions dominating the rest of the country, introduced with the
Swiss diet, later improved and popularized by the
US Senate and
Connecticut compromise in the USA, a system copied by many other countries parliaments. •
1955 System – In
Japan, malapportionment benefits the
Liberal Democratic Party, who have ruled for over 60 years (with two brief periods in opposition, totaling 5 years). This has been the subject of multiple Japanese Supreme Court cases. •
Population of Canadian federal ridings – in the
Canadian House of Commons, in 2021, the least populous riding had 26,000 people while the most populous had 209,000 people. Several provinces are significantly overrepresented relative to their population. • The
Constitution of Australia guarantees each of the six founding states an equal number of Senators in the
Australian Senate, regardless of population, but this would not necessarily apply to other states were they admitted or created. It also does not mandate any Senators in the
Northern Territory and
Australian Capital Territory, and Parliament has only seen fit to provide these non-state Territories with two Senators for each Territory. In addition to the general malapportionment these requirements create between the most populous states and the least, which saw former Prime Minister
Paul Keating describe the Senate as "unrepresentative swill", it also means that the Australian Capital Territory has four less Senators than Tasmania despite their populations being roughly equal. The two Senators for each territory also face re-election every election, rather than every second election, depriving the Territories of the stability that comes from long-term representation in the Senate. • The
Constitution of Australia mandates a minimum of five members per original state in the
Australian House of Representatives. This has the effect of creating a malapportionment where Tasmania has a significantly lower number of voters per seat than the rest of the country, giving Tasmania two additional seats than they would have without this 5 seat minimum. •
Bjelkemander – malapportionment in
Queensland, during the 1970s and 1980s, designed to benefit the rural-based
Country Party who were able to govern uninhibited during this period. The system was named after
Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen, who was leader of the Country Party and
Premier of Queensland for 20 years during this period. Bjelke-Petersen's administration eventually became embroiled in
corruption and lost an election to the Labor Party, who removed the malapportionment. •
Playmander – malapportionment existed in
South Australia from 1938 to 1968. It was designed to benefit the rural-based
Liberal and Country League, allowing them to rule with majority of seats, even when the opposing Labor Party won the popular vote. The system was named after
Sir Thomas Playford, who was leader of the LCL and
Premier of South Australia for 26 years during this period. The malapportionment was mostly removed by LCL leader
Steele Hall who was embarrassed at how undemocratic it was. • The
Western Australian Legislative Council had a malapportionment that clearly favoured the rural conservative National Party, with the state split into electoral regions with significant differences in voter numbers. After the Labor Party won a landslide victory in both houses in the
2021 Western Australian state election they abolished the electoral region system, replacing it with a single statewide constituency electing 37 members via optional preferential voting. This created a one-vote, one-value system. • The
United States Constitution guarantees each state two Senators in the
United States Senate regardless of population. For instance, the state of
California has 70 times the population of the state of
Wyoming, but each has two Senators, making those who live in California vastly underrepresented. In the 21st century, this system benefits
white Americans (who are more likely to live in smaller states) and the
Republican Party (there are more small red states, than small blue states), who wield political power disproportionate to their numbers. This has grown more impactful as
bipartisanship has become less common, with Senators increasingly voting along party lines. • In the
antebellum period new states were admitted in a pattern of one
slave state and one free state each, creating a balance in the Senate despite the population total of the free states far exceeding that of slave states by the
1850 US census. California being admitted as a free state under the
Compromise of 1850 broke the pattern and the
Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution abolished slavery in all states by 1865, making the issue moot. •
Rotten and pocket boroughs in
England,
Great Britain, or the
United Kingdom before the
Reform Act 1832, which had a very small electorate and could be used by a patron to gain unrepresentative influence within the
unreformed House of Commons. ==See also==