How Grade 7 like multiple choice could solve the constitution making process and beyond

Jabulani Chirinda Avatar

Zimbabwe is in the process of drafting a new constitution, this is a follow up to the GNU agreement passed in the year 2008. As we are all familiar with by now, the constitution making process has been a long and excruciating journey. It started with “crowdsourcing” – to use the modern term – followed by proposals coming from political parties and lobby groups. Because of the complex nature of gathering all the facts, the government set up a professional body called COPAC to do all the leg work of gathering facts and performing all the necessary consultation and administration across the country.

Presumably, all the facts were gathered and the next stage was the correlation of gathered data to produce a draft document which would be reviewed by the GNU partners before being pushed further to the nation for a referendum.

According to Wikipedia;

 A referendum (also known as a plebiscite or a vote on a ballot question) is a direct vote in which an entire electorate is asked to either accept or reject a particular proposal, usually a piece of legislation which has been passed into law by the local legislative body and was signed by the pertinent executive official(s). This may result in the adoption of a new constitution, a constitutional amendment, a law, the recall of an elected official or simply a specific government policy.

So how does the grade seven-like multiple choice help us?

Well, when a referendum is conducted individuals are required to vote a yes or a no to either entirely accept the document or a no to entirely reject the document just as stated above. In most cases there is no middle ground. This is what makes the whole exercise so politically exciting. How would it be if all the key elements of the constitution where listed on a grade seven-like multiple choice paper with questions or rather items ranging in hundreds and all the people would have to do would be to shade boxes that correspond to their responses? Obviously this method would have its own (bugs) demerits and its strengths. The strengths would be;

  1. Computerisation would make it so easy to analyse data and ultimately deal with all sticking points using available data
  2. This model would best represent the views of the nation rather than anyone claiming to know what the views of the nation would be.
  3. There would be no “human error” in interpretation of gathered data.
  4. Each item on the “multiple choice” paper would receive its own yes or no based on the popular response thus eliminating further problems of never ending debates which can waste a lot of tax-payers’ resources.
  5. The formulation of the constitution would then be based on the gathered data thus simplifying the whole process.
  6. Using some combination of affordable technology and software this system could be most reliable way to get around the logjam that is eminent.

Yes, this could sound so novel and inapplicable but to solve this African problem we need an African solution…and the grade seven exams have been written in this country by close to 90% of those that are eligible to vote anyway. There are a lot of loop holes in the above proposed solution but as you identify them, think of how they could also be eliminated and ultimately improve the system. This “grade seven multiple choice” can even be extended to elections too and those ZIMSEC machines could help run the elections too….why not!

10 comments

  1. Garikai Dzoma

    You nailed it! There are somethings are do not like in the new constitution and some that I like. So what is a to do?

  2. jonhi

    sounds cumbersome and… very very expensive

  3. wengai

    sounds incredibly simple and effective. Interesting article!!!

  4. Robert Dondo

    Electricity: Can Zesa guarantee that on the day of the Vote, all the voting stations have electricity? Doubt it. Having said that, a solar based voting system could work.

  5. Concern Shoko

    Great thinking, but with our political landscape this will be a disaster….! Only Estonia has managed to successfully implement electronic voting..and (suprise suprise) namibia is on the path to implement such technology and digitalisation of the gvt, again thanks to Estonia, they copy pasted everything – no need to re-invent the candle!

  6. shiz

    nice!! zvinongoratidza kuti varume ava havana kudzidza!!

  7. R mugabe

    this thing could who if the name of the country is not zimbabwe , this is wish full thinking………………. nyika ino haitongwe ne tech takairwira neropa….

  8. VR

    problem is not with the voting, it is with the contents, agreeing on what options to ask the people on. should have been handled like the census door to door and not those pointless gatherings

  9. tinm@n

    Its nice to follow through logically with if-then-else conclusions, isnt it? I am certain dozens of tech people have thought up lots of sound and viable sounding ideas even long before internet was generally available…

    But the truth is that in the real world(in this case Zimbabwe) you cannot expect much from such proposals without taking into account the (political) complexities that influence such decisions. Mistrust from the voters, desire for control from the politicians & overall phobia for digital tallying systems.

    It is good to have suggestions but to bury your head in the sand and ignore the political landscape is 100% pure, undiluted IGNORANCE

    1. fiend

      avoid lemons

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