城市政治中的政策响应与政治问责

Anthony M. Sayers, Jack Lucas
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引用次数: 3

摘要

加拿大的市政政治出现了特殊的模式。与联邦和省级政府不同,城市的政党政治很弱,或者根本不存在。但是,纵观加拿大西部三个城市——卡尔加里、埃德蒙顿和温哥华的市政选举的整个历史,我们也发现,与更高级别的政治家不同,市政代表越来越有可能赢得多次连任,面临的任何竞争挑战的威胁要小得多。此外,市政官员的职业生涯正在稳步延长,这导致了相对稳定的、几乎静止的市政府,当议员选择下台而不是被迫下台时,往往会看到最常见的变化。当然,这种模式与活跃的民主国家的普遍假设背道而驰,包括这个国家,即政府领导人的反应能力(即遵循选民的意愿)和他们对自己所采取的行动的责任,最好是通过政府的频繁更替来实现的:需要时不时地把政治家赶出去,让新的人尝试把事情做得更好。目前还不清楚市议会的稳定程度和任职程度是否真的符合选民的最大利益。更明显的是,在城市层面上缺乏政党制度似乎促成了这种特殊的动态,而城市的政客们也有兴趣保持这种状态。虽然政党关系在竞选协调方面为候选人提供了一些好处,但它们也使选民更加清楚地了解每个候选人在政策方面的立场。这可能对选民有帮助,但城市政治家可能会发现模糊他们的立场更有用,让选民不确定如何确切地定义一个特定的议员的立场。查阅议员投票记录所需的大量信息,以及媒体对议会日常事务的报道相对较少,使得大多数选民在决定支持谁时倾向于依赖政治信号以外的东西。不可避免地,候选人的个人性格和经验长度在投票决定中占据了更大的优先地位。因此,议员任职的时间越长,他或她可能继续任职的时间就越长。这种现象的自然结果是,市议会不太可能两极分化,因为议员们有动力通过限制自己和其他代表之间明显的政策差异来寻求共识,从而形成一种动态,使市议会更像一个法人团体,而不是一个党派立法机构。只要市民对市议会的整体行动基本上保持平静,他们可能会认为,与维持现状相比,在选举时更换他们的风险是不必要的高。这种行为在很大程度上挑战了有关政治进程如何改善政治反应和问责制的主流理论。这种情况发生的时候,城市正在成为现代全球经济中日益重要和强大的节点。他们的治理方式的本质与加拿大人对其他级别政府的期望大相径庭,这一点不容小觑。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Policy Responsiveness and Political Accountability in City Politics
Peculiar patterns have emerged in municipal politics in Canada. Unlike at federal and provincial levels of government, party politics is weak or absent in cities. But looking at the entire history of municipal elections of three Western Canadian cities — Calgary, Edmonton and Vancouver — also finds that, again unlike politicians at higher levels, municipal representatives are increasingly more likely to win repeated re-elections, facing a much lower threat from any competitive challenge. In addition, the careers of municipal politicians are growing steadily longer, leading to relatively stable, almost static, city governments that tend to see change most commonly when councillors choose to step down, rather than being forced out. Such patterns, of course, run counter to the general presumption in lively democracies, including this one, that the responsiveness of government leaders (that is, following the wishes of their constituents) and their accountability for the actions they take are best served by frequent turnovers in government: The need to throw politicians out every now and again to let new ones try and do things better. Whether the remarkable levels of stability and incumbency on city councils actually do serve the best interests of voters is unclear. More clear is that the lack of a party system at the city level seems to have contributed to this peculiar dynamic, and that city politicians have an interest in keeping it that way. While party affiliations provide a candidate some benefits in the form of campaign co-ordination, they also provide voters with increased clarity about what each candidate stands for policy-wise. That might be helpful to voters, but city politicians might find it more useful to blur their positions, leaving voters uncertain of exactly how to define a specific councillor’s stand, overall. The  amount of information required to root through a councillor’s voting record, and the relatively light media coverage of daily council business, leaves most voters inclined to rely on something other than political signals when they decide who to support. Inevitably, a candidate’s personal character and length of experience take on a larger priority in the voting decision. So, the longer a councillor serves, the longer he or she might be likely to keep serving. The natural outcome of this phenomenon is that city councils are less likely to become polarized as councillors have an incentive to seek consensus by limiting obvious policy distinctions between themselves and their fellow representatives, contributing to a dynamic where city council works more like a corporate body and less like a partisan legislature. As long as citizens remain largely unperturbed by the overall actions of their city council, they might judge the risk of replacing them at election time as unnecessarily high compared to sticking with the status quo. This behaviour challenges much of the prevailing theory about how political processes improve political responsiveness and accountability. This is occurring at a time when cities are emerging as important and increasingly powerful nodes in the modern global economy. That the very nature of how they are governed is diverging so markedly from the norm that Canadians have come to expect from other levels of government is not something to be considered lightly.
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