SECOND
SECTION
CASE OF YUMAK AND SADAK v.
(Application no. 10226/03)
JUDGMENT
30 January 2007
This judgment will
become final in the circumstances set out in Article 44 § 2 of the
Convention. It may be subject to editorial revision.
In the case of Yumak and Sadak v.
The European Court of Human Rights (Second
Section), sitting as a Chamber composed of:
Mr J.-P. Costa,
President,
Mr I. Cabral Barreto,
Mr R. Türmen,
Mr M. Ugrekhelidze,
Mrs A. Mularoni,
Mrs E. Fura-Sandström,
Mr D. Popović,
judges,
and Mrs S. Dollé,
Section Registrar,
Having deliberated in private on 9 May 2006
and 4 January 2007,
Delivers the following judgment, which was
adopted on the last‑mentioned date:
PROCEDURE
1. The case originated in an
application (no. 10226/03) against the
2. The applicants were
granted legal aid.
3. They alleged that the national electoral threshold of 10% for parliamentary elections interfered with the free expression of the opinion of the people in the choice of the legislature. They relied on Article 3 of Protocol No. 1.
4. By a decision of 9 May
2006 the Chamber declared the application partly admissible.
5. The applicants and the
Government each filed further written observations (Rule 59 § 1).
6. A hearing took place in
public in the
There appeared before the Court:
(a) for the
Government
Mr A.M. Özmen, Co-Agent,
Mr M.H. Ünler,
Mrs V. Sirmen,
Mrs Y. Renda,
Mrs A. Özdemir,
Mrs Ü. Yeğengil,] Advisers;
(b) for the applicants
Mr T. Elçi, Counsel,
Mrs S. Turan, Adviser.
The Court heard addresses by Mr Özmen and Mr
Elçi.
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
7. The applicants were born in 1962 and 1959 respectively and live in Şırnak. They stood for election in the parliamentary elections of 3 November 2002 as candidates of the People’s Democratic Party (DEHAP) in the province of Şırnak, but neither of them was elected.
A. The parliamentary elections of 3
November 2002
8. Following the 1999
earthquakes
9. It was in that context
that on 31 July 2002 the Grand National Assembly of
10. In early September three
left-wing political parties, HADEP, EMEP and SDP, decided to form a “Labour,
Peace and Democracy Block” and to form a new political party, DEHAP. The
applicants began their electoral campaign as the new party’s leading candidates
in the province of Şırnak.
11. The results of the
elections of 3 November 2002 in the province of Şırnak gave the DEHAP
list 47,449 of the 103,111 votes cast, a score of about 45.95%. However, as the
party had not succeeded in passing the national threshold of 10%, the
applicants were not elected. The three seats allocated to Şırnak
province were shared as follows: two seats for the AKP (Adalet ve Kalkınma – the Justice and Development Party, a
party of the conservative right), which had polled 14.05% (14,460 votes), and
one seat for Mr Tatar, an independent candidate who had polled 9.69%
(9,914 votes).
12. Of the eighteen parties
which had taken part in the elections only the AKP and the CHP (Cumhuriyet Halk Partisi – the People’s
Republican Party, a left-wing party) succeeded in passing the 10% threshold.
With 34.26% of the votes cast, the AKP won 363 seats, 66% of those in the
National Assembly. The CHP, which polled 19.4%, obtained 178 seats, or 33% of
the total. Nine independent candidates were also elected.
13. The results of these
elections were generally interpreted as a huge political upheaval. Not only did
the proportion of the electorate not represented in parliament reach a record
level in
14. To explain the National
Assembly’s unrepresentativity, some commentators[1]
have referred to the cumulative effect of a number of factors over and above
the existence of a high national threshold. For example, because of the protest
vote phenomenon linked to the economic and political crisis, the five parties
which had obtained seats in the 1999 parliamentary elections were unable to
reach the 10% threshold in 2002 and were accordingly deprived of representation
in parliament. Similarly, electoral fragmentation had an effect on the results in
that numerous attempts to form pre-electoral coalitions had come to nothing.
B. The general context and the
electoral system
15. The electoral system is
one of the subjects which have been the most debated in
16. The elections of 1950,
1954 and 1957 – in which the majority representation system was used – were
unable to ensure an institutional balance between the majority in parliament
and the opposition. This imbalance was one of the main reasons for the 1960
coup d’état. Following the intervention of the armed forces parliament adopted
proportional representation, using the D’Hondt method, to strengthen pluralism
and the political system. As a result, the elections in 1965 and 1969 produced
stable majorities in the National Assembly while enabling small parties to be
represented. However, in the elections of 1973 and 1977 the main political
movements were unable to establish stable governments, although they had wide
electoral support. That period of government instability was marked by the
formation of one coalition after another, each made fragile by the
disproportionate influence of the small parties on government policy.
17. Following the military
regime of the years 1980 to 1983 Law no. 2839 on the election of members
of the National Assembly, enacted on 13 June 1983, re-established
proportional representation, with two electoral thresholds. To the 10% national
threshold was added a provincial threshold (the number of electors divided by the
number of seats to be filled in each constituency); in 1995 the Constitutional
Court declared the provincial threshold null and void. In the 1983
parliamentary elections the Motherland Party (ANAP) obtained an absolute
majority in parliament.
18. The parliamentary
elections of 29 November 1987 likewise enabled the ANAP, with 36.31% of the
vote, to form a stable parliamentary majority. Two other parties also won
seats. About 19% of votes were cast in favour of parties which ultimately
failed to reach the 10% threshold. In the elections of 20 October 1991 five
parties gained seats in parliament. This result was due in particular to the
fact that three small political parties (MÇP, IDP and HEP) had taken part in
the elections under the banner of other political parties with the aim of
circumventing section 16 of Law no. 2839, which makes it illegal to
form joint lists before elections. The proportion of the votes cast in favour
of parties not represented in the new parliament thus fell to 0.5%. The
Government was based on a coalition of two parties. In those elections the
eighteen candidates of the HEP (People’s Labour Party – pro-Kurdish) were
elected to parliament on the list of the (social-democratic) SHP party; they
later resigned from the SHP to join the ranks of their own party, the HEP.
19. In the general election
of 24 December 1995 five parties gained seats in parliament. However, as none
of them had a parliamentary majority, a coalition was formed. The proportion of
the votes cast in favour of parties not represented in parliament came to 14%.
20. The 1999 parliamentary
elections again resulted in no party having a parliamentary majority. Five
political parties won seats in the National Assembly. A coalition of three
parties formed a government. The proportion of the votes cast in favour of
parties not represented in parliament came to 18%.
21. At present, numerous
proposals to correct the effects of the 10% threshold have been put forward,
both in parliament and by leading figures of civil society.
II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC AND
INTERNATIONAL LAW AND PRACTICE
A. Relevant domestic texts
1. The Constitution
22. Article 67 § 6 of the Constitution,
as amended on 23 July 1995, provides:
“Electoral laws must strike a balance between
fair representation and governmental stability.”
23. Article 80 of the
Constitution provides:
“Members of the Grand National Assembly of
Turkey shall represent the whole nation and not the regions or persons which
have elected them.”
2. The electoral system
24. Law no. 2839 on the
election of members of the National Assembly, published in the Official Gazette
on 13 June 1983, lays down the rules of the system for parliamentary elections.
25. The Turkish National
Assembly has 550 members, elected in 85 constituencies in a single round
of voting. They take place throughout the national territory, on the same day,
under the proportional representation system. The suffrage is free, equal,
universal and secret. Counting the votes and recording the results is done in
public. Each province forms one electoral constituency.
26. Section 16 of Law no.
2839 provides:
“... [P]olitical parties may not present joint
lists...”
27. Section 33 of Law no.
2839 (as amended on 23 May 1987) provides:
“In a general election parties may not win seats unless they obtain, nationally, more than 10% of the votes validly cast... An independent candidate standing for election on the list of a political party may be elected only if the list of the party concerned obtains sufficient votes to take it over the 10% national threshold...”
28. In allocating seats the D’Hondt
system of proportional representation is used. That method – under which the
votes cast for each list are first divided by a series of whole numbers (1, 2,
3, 4, 5 etc.) and seats then allocated to the lists which have the highest
quotients – tends to favour the majority party.
3. Constitutional case-law
29. In a judgment of 18
November 1995 (E. 1995/54, K. 1995/59) the
30. The
The relevant passages of the judgment read as
follows:
“... [T]he Constitution defines the
The impact of a representative democracy is
visible in various fields. The effect of unfair systems adopted with the
intention of ensuring stability is to hamper social developments. ... Where
representation is concerned, the importance attached to fairness is the main
condition for governmental stability. Fairness ensures stability. However, the
idea of stability, in the absence of fairness, creates instability. The
principle of ‘fair representation’ with which the Constitution requires
[compliance] consists in free, equal, secret and universal [suffrage], with one
round of voting and public access to the counting of votes and the recording of
results, and produces a number of representatives proportional to the number of
votes obtained. The principle of ‘governmental stability’ is perceived as a
reference to methods designed to reflect votes [within] the legislature so as
to guarantee the strength of the executive power. The ‘governmental stability’
which it is sought to ensure through the threshold (described as a ‘hurdle’), just
like ‘fair representation’ ..., is protected by the Constitution. In elections ...
importance must be attached to combining these two principles, which seem
antinomic in certain situations, in such a way [as to ensure] that they
counterbalance and complement each other...
In order to achieve the goal of ‘governmental
stability’, set forth in the Constitution, a national [threshold] has been
introduced...
Clearly, the [threshold] of 10% of the votes
cast nationally laid down in section 33 of Law no. 2839 ... came into
force with the approval of the legislature. Electoral systems must be
compatible with constitutional principles ..., and it is inevitable that some
of these systems should contain strict rules. Thresholds which result from the
nature of the systems and [are expressed] in percentages, and [which] at
national level restrict the right to vote and to be elected, are applicable
[and] acceptable ... provided that they do not exceed normal limits... The
[threshold] of 10% is compatible with the principles of governmental stability
and fair representation...”
Three judges of the
31. In the same judgment,
however, the
“Although a national threshold is imposed in
parliamentary elections in accordance with the principle of ‘governmental
stability’, imposing in addition a threshold for each electoral constituency is
incompatible with the principle of ‘fair representation’.”
B. Relevant Council of
1. Report of the ad hoc Committee
of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of
32. The Government referred
to the report of the Ad hoc Committee for the Observation of Parliamentary
Elections in
“As widely reported by the media, two parties
only out of 18 found their way into the new TBMM; the AKP (Justice and
Development) and CHP (Republican People’s Party), leaving out all other
parties, which had been represented so far in the parliament because they could
not meet the 10% threshold. The party in government until the elections
received only 1% of the votes. Economic and corruption problems were
determining in the elections.
A clear and absolute majority has emerged with
362 seats for the AKP, 179 seats for the opposition and 9 seats for independent
members. (These independent members are elected in small towns where they have
a good reputation.) It should be recalled that AKP had 59 seats in the previous
parliament, and the CHP three (1999 elections).
This situation might create probably greater
stability in the country by avoiding complicated and unstable coalitions. On
Monday 4 November 2002 the Turkish stock exchange went up by 6.1%.
However, it also means that approximately 44%
of the voters have no representation in the Parliament.
The results must thus be considered as a clear
protest vote against the establishment as a whole, since none of the three
parties in the old governing coalition got enough votes for a single seat!”
2. The Code of good practice in
electoral matters
33. The Council of Europe has
not issued any binding standards for electoral thresholds. The question has not
been raised in the organisation’s standard-setting texts. On the other hand,
the Code of good practice in electoral matters, adopted by the Venice
Commission, makes recommendations on the subject (see Venice Commission, “Code
of good practice in electoral matters: Guidelines and explanatory report”,
Opinion no. 190/2002). As a general principle, the Code requires suffrage to be
direct, but in the case of a bicameral parliament it permits one of the
Chambers to be elected by indirect suffrage. As for the electoral system to be
used, the Code’s guidelines state that any system may be chosen.
3. The Parliamentary Assembly’s
Resolution 1380 (2004)
34. Paragraphs 6 and 23 of
Resolution 1380 (2004) on “Honouring of obligations and commitments by
“6. With regard to pluralist
democracy, the Assembly recognises that
...
23. The Assembly therefore invites
...
ii. amend the electoral code to
lower the 10% threshold and enable Turkish citizens living abroad to vote
without having to present themselves at the frontier;
...”
C. Comparative law
35. Although there is no
uniform classification of types of ballot and electoral systems, it is usual to
distinguish three main types: majority vote systems, proportional systems and
mixed systems. In majority vote systems the winner is the candidate or list of
candidates obtaining the majority of the votes in the decisive round of voting.
This type of ballot makes it possible to vote in governments with clear
parliamentary majorities, but at the same time it militates against the
representation of minority political parties. Thus, for example, in the
36. Currently, proportional
systems are the most widely used in
37. In order to ensure stable
majorities in legislatures elected by proportional representation, statutory
electoral thresholds are often used. Thresholds are “limits, fixed or variable,
defined in terms of the electoral result, which determine the share of a list
or candidate in the distribution of seats”. However, the role played by
thresholds varies in accordance with the level at which they are set and the
party system in each country. A low threshold excludes only very small
groupings, which makes it more difficult to form stable majorities, whereas in
cases where the party system is highly fragmented a high threshold deprives
many voters of representation.
38. Among the member States
of the Council of Europe which use one or other variant of proportional
representation in the context of a mixed system, and which set an electoral
threshold, the following examples may be found. In
39. As a general rule, the
threshold fixed does not apply as such to coalitions, which must pass higher
thresholds. In the
THE LAW
40. The applicants alleged
that the imposition of an electoral threshold of 10% in parliamentary elections
interfered with the free expression of the opinion of the people in the choice
of the legislature. They relied on Article 3 of Protocol No. 1, which
provides:
“The High Contracting Parties undertake to
hold free elections at reasonable intervals by secret ballot, under conditions
which will ensure the free expression of the opinion of the people in the
choice of the legislature.”
A. Arguments of the parties
1. The applicants
41. The applicants submitted
in the first place that the electoral threshold was based on the particular
situation in
42. Secondly, they rejected
the argument that the threshold served the legitimate aim of ensuring
governmental stability. A study of the historical background in
43. The applicants contended
that it was difficult to defend the view that the exceptional measure in
question strengthened representative democracy. Such a high national threshold
made representation very unfair and led to a crisis of legitimacy for the
government, since parliament ought to be the free tribune of any democracy.
Clearly, a parliament whose composition reflected only about 55% of the votes
cast was not capable of supplying the representative legitimacy on which any
democracy is based.
44. The national threshold of
10% was also disproportionate and arbitrary, and impaired the very essence of
the right guaranteed by Article 3 of Protocol No. 1. It deprived a large
proportion of the population of the possibility of being represented in
parliament. In the parliamentary elections of 1987, 1991, 1995 and 1999 the
proportion of the votes cast in favour of parties not represented in parliament
had been, respectively, 19.4% (about 4.5 million votes), 0.5% (about
140,000 votes), 14% (about 4 million votes) and 18.3% (about 6 million votes). The
results of the 2002 election had led to a “crisis of representation”, since
45.3% of the votes – that is, about 14.5 million votes – had not been
taken into consideration and were not reflected in the composition of
parliament.
45. The applicants also
stressed the question of regional representation. They asserted that the
parties from the south-eastern part of the country did not have a single member
of parliament, although they could count on about two million votes. They
submitted in that connection that the electoral threshold had been fixed in particular
to block the representation of the Kurdish people of the region. In addition,
whereas DEHAP was the leading party in thirteen provincial constituencies and
the second strongest in two more, it had not obtained a single seat in
parliament.
46. Lastly, the applicants
submitted that the electoral threshold of 10% was very high in comparison with
the thresholds which applied in other European systems. They argued that there
was no good reason to impose a minimum of 10% nationally and that such an
obstacle was fundamentally at variance with representative democracy.
2. The Government
47. Referring to the
principles established in the Mathieu-Mohin
and Clerfayt v. Belgium case (judgment of 2 March 1987, Series A no. 113),
the Government submitted that Article 3 of Protocol No. 1 did not
set forth an absolute right to vote and that the Contracting States should be
left a wide margin of appreciation with regard to the fixing of electoral
thresholds.
48. They observed that
Article 3 of Protocol No. 1 did not include expressions such as “everyone” or
“no one shall”, arguing that this seemed to indicate merely an undertaking on
the part of the High Contracting Parties “to hold free elections at reasonable
intervals by secret ballot”.
49. Article 3 of Protocol No.
1 guaranteed in principle the right to vote and the right to stand for election
to the legislature. Consequently, it provided for the organisation of free
elections without imposing any particular electoral system. In addition, these
elections had to be held by secret ballot and at “reasonable” intervals.
Admittedly, the elections had to be held under conditions calculated to ensure
“the free expression of the opinion of the people”. That concept meant that no
constraint or pressure was to be brought to bear on electors to influence their
choice of candidate; it also implied, essentially, the principle of equal
treatment for all citizens in the exercise of their right to vote and their
right to stand for election.
50. As regards the Turkish
electoral system, the Government explained that Law no. 2839 had introduced the
proportional system with a national threshold of 10%. That system had made it
possible to form majorities in the aftermath of the elections in 1983, 1987,
1991, 1995, 1999 and 2002. Thanks to the threshold, it had been possible after three
of those elections to form a government from the representatives of a single
majority party. That meant that the threshold served a legitimate aim, namely
ensuring governmental stability, and that there was a consensus in favour of
keeping it. Moreover, in its judgment of 18 November 1995 the
51. The Government went on to
say that the national threshold had been introduced with the aim of preventing
political fragmentation among the representatives of the people. Furthermore, the
intention was to give small groupings the opportunity of establishing
themselves nationally and thus of securing representation in parliament. The
threshold applied to all the parties which had taken part in the 2002
elections. For example, the DSP (Democratic Left Party), the ANAP and the MHP
(Nationalist Movement Party), which had formed the coalition government after
the 1999 elections, had obtained, respectively, 1.23%, 5.12% and 8.34% of the
votes and had not been able – any more than DEHAP had, with 6.23% of the votes
– to obtain a seat in parliament. The same was true of the GP (Youth Party),
the SP (Socialist Party) and the YTP (New Turkey Party) which had polled 7.25%,
2.49% and 1.15% respectively.
52. The Government pointed
out that if DEHAP had succeeded in crossing the 10% threshold it would have won
seats in parliament, like the AKP and the CHP, which had obtained 34.26% and
19.4% of the votes respectively.
53. They further submitted
that in domestic law there was nothing to prevent political parties from
forming coalitions in order to get through the 10% barrier. DEHAP could have
organised a coalition with the other political parties who had presented
candidates in the elections on 3 November 2002 and thereby gained seats in
the Grand National Assembly. In that connection they emphasised that
independents, who had obtained 1% of the votes, had won nine seats.
54. The Government further
observed that the CHP – the second strongest party in parliament after the 2002
elections – had been unable to cross the threshold in the 1999 parliamentary
elections. That showed that a political party which did not get over the hurdle
at any particular election could do so at a later one and thus obtain members’
seats.
55. Moreover, the Government
emphasised that between 1961 and 1980, during which period proportional
representation without any electoral threshold was the practice followed,
56. In conclusion, the
Government submitted that the 10% threshold was not an obstacle to the free
expression of the opinion of the people in the choice of the legislature.
Lastly, they drew the Court’s attention to the fact that the current parliament
reflected the votes of more than 50% of the electors.
B. The Court’s assessment
1. General principles
57. Article 3 of Protocol No.
1 seems at first sight different from the other provisions of the Convention
and its Protocols which guarantee rights, as it is phrased in terms of the
obligation of the High Contracting Parties to hold elections which ensure the
free expression of the opinion of the people rather than in terms of a
particular right or freedom.
58. However, having regard to
the travaux préparatoires of Article
3 of the Protocol and the way the provision has been interpreted in the context
of the Convention as a whole, the Court has established that Article 3 of
Protocol No. 1 guarantees individual rights, including the right to vote and
the right to stand for election (see Mathieu-Mohin
and Clerfayt, cited above, pp. 22‑23, §§ 46‑51). In fact,
it has taken the view that this wording, of a type which does not have its like
elsewhere, can be explained by the desire to give greater solemnity to the
commitment undertaken by the Contracting States and emphasise that this is a
sphere in which they are under an obligation to take positive measures and not
just refrain from interference (ibid.,
§ 50).
59. The Court, which has
frequently pointed out the importance of the democratic principles underlying
the interpretation and application of the Convention (see, among other
authorities, United Communist Party of Turkey and Others
v. Turkey,
judgment of 30 January 1998, Reports of
Judgments and Decisions 1998‑I, § 45), emphasises that the rights guaranteed
by Article 3 of Protocol No. 1 are crucial to
establishing and maintaining the foundations of a meaningful democracy governed
by the rule of law.
60. Nonetheless, the rights
enshrined in Article 3 of Protocol No. 1 are not absolute. There is room for
implied limitations, and Contracting States must be given a margin of
appreciation in this sphere.
61. The scope of that margin
in the present case has given rise to considerable debate. The Court re-affirms
that the margin of appreciation in this area is wide (see Mathieu-Mohin and Clerfayt, cited above, § 52; and, more recently, Matthews v. the United Kingdom [GC], no.
24833/94, § 63, ECHR 1999‑I; Labita
v. Italy [GC], no. 26772/95, § 201, ECHR 2000‑IV; Podkolzina v. Latvia, no. 46726/99, §
33, ECHR 2002‑II; and Hirst
v. the United Kingdom (no. 2) [GC], no. 74025/01, § 61, ECHR 2005‑IX).
The same applies to determination of the type of ballot through which the
expression of the opinion of the people is mediated, whether proportional
representation, majority voting or some other system (see Matthews, cited above, § 63). In that connection, Article 3 of the Protocol goes no further than prescribing “free”
elections held at “reasonable intervals” “by secret ballot” and “under
conditions which will ensure the free expression of the opinion of the people”.
Subject to that reservation, it does not create any “obligation to introduce a
specific system” such as proportional representation or majority voting with one
or two ballots (see Mathieu-Mohin and
Clerfayt, cited above, § 54).
The rules in this area vary in accordance with
the historical and political factors specific to each State; the large variety
of situations provided for in the electoral legislation of numerous member
States of the Council of Europe shows the diversity of the possible options. For
the purposes of applying Article 3 of the Protocol, any electoral legislation
must be assessed in the light of the political evolution of the country
concerned, so that features that would be unacceptable in the context of one
system may be justified in the context of another (see Py v. France, no. 66289/01, § 46, ECHR 2005‑I (extracts)), at least so
long as the chosen system provides for conditions which will ensure the “free
expression of the opinion of the people in the choice of the legislature”.
62. Moreover,
it should not be forgotten that electoral systems seek to fulfil objectives
which are scarcely compatible with each other: on the one hand to reflect
fairly faithfully the opinions of the people, and on the other, to channel
currents of thought so as to promote the emergence of a sufficiently clear and
coherent political will. In these circumstances the phrase “conditions which will
ensure the free expression of the opinion of the people in the choice of the
legislature” implies essentially – apart from freedom of expression (already
protected under Article 10 of the Convention) – the principle of equality of
treatment of all citizens in the exercise of their right to vote and their
right to stand for election. It does not follow, however, that all votes must
necessarily have equal weight as regards the outcome of the election or that
all candidates must have equal chances of victory. Thus no electoral system can
eliminate “wasted votes” (see Mathieu-Mohin and Clerfayt, cited above, § 54).
63. And
yet none of the above criteria should in principle be considered more valid
than any other, provided that it guarantees the
expression of the opinion of the people through free, fair and regular
elections.
64. The Convention
institutions have always considered electoral thresholds in the context of the
margin of appreciation left to member States, noting that in this sphere States
enjoy considerable latitude (see Federación
nacionalista Canaria v. Spain (dec.), no. 56618/00, ECHR 2001‑VI; Etienne Tete v. France, no. 11123/84,
Commission decision of 9 December 1987, Decisions and Reports (DR) 54, p.
52; Marcel Fournier v. France,
no. 11406/85, Commission decision of 10 March 1988; and Silvius Magnago and Südtiroler Volkspartei v. Italy, no. 25035/94,
Commission decision of 15 April 1996, DR 85, p. 112).
65. However, it is for the
Court to determine in the last resort whether the requirements of Article 3 of
Protocol No. 1 have been complied with. It has to satisfy itself that
limitations do not curtail the rights in question to such an extent as to
impair their very essence, and deprive them of their effectiveness; that they
are imposed in pursuit of a legitimate aim and that the means employed are not
disproportionate (see Mathieu-Mohin and
Clerfayt, cited above, § 52). In particular, any such conditions must not
thwart the free expression of the people in the choice of the legislature – in
other words, they must reflect, or not run counter to, the concern to maintain
the integrity and effectiveness of an electoral procedure aimed at identifying
the will of the people through universal suffrage (see Hilbe v. Liechtenstein (dec.), no. 31981/96, ECHR 1999‑VI,
and Melnichenko v. Ukraine,
no. 17707/02, § 56, ECHR 2004‑X). Any departure from the principle
of universal suffrage risks undermining the democratic validity of the legislature
thus elected and the laws which it promulgates. Exclusion of any groups or
categories of the general population must accordingly be reconcilable with the
underlying purposes of Article 3 of Protocol No. 1 (see, mutatis mutandis, Aziz v. Cyprus, no. 69949/01, § 28, ECHR 2004‑V). Equally,
once the wishes of the people have been freely and democratically expressed, no
subsequent amendment to the organisation of the electoral system may call that
choice into question, except in the presence of compelling grounds for the
democratic order (see Lykourezos v. Greece,
no. 33554/03, § 52, ECHR 2006‑...).
2. Application of the above
principles in the present case
66. In the applicants’
submission, the fact that they were not elected to the National Assembly,
despite the score of 45.95% of the votes cast in the constituency of
Şırnak achieved in the parliamentary elections of 3 November
2002 by DEHAP, the party on whose list they had stood for election, was
incompatible with Article 3 of Protocol No. 1. They explained that their party,
which had polled 6.22% of the national vote, had failed to reach the electoral
threshold of 10% and had accordingly been deprived of parliamentary
representation.
67. However, the Court notes
that the national threshold concerned is the product of an electoral rule which
determines how the seats in parliament are to be shared nationally among the
different lists and different candidates. Its effect is to deprive of
parliamentary representation those political parties which fail to cross it. It
is provided for in section 33 of Law no. 2839 and was introduced well before
the elections of 3 November 2002, so that the applicants could have foreseen
that if their party failed to get over the hurdle complained of in those
elections they would not be able to win any seats in parliament regardless of
the number of votes they obtained in their constituency (see, by converse
implication, Lykourezos, cited above,
§ 55).
68. The Court would further
point out that, unlike other Convention provisions, Article 3 of Protocol No. 1
does not specify or limit the aims which a restriction must be intended to
serve, and it accepts that the measure complained of is calculated to prevent
excessive and debilitating parliamentary fragmentation and thus strengthen
governmental stability, regard being had in particular to the period of
instability Turkey went through in the 1970s (see paragraph 16 above).
69. As regards the
proportionality of the measure, the Court must examine this question in the
light of the criteria established in its case-law and take due account of the
political and historical context in Turkey, without losing sight of the fact
that rules that would be unacceptable in the context of one system may be
justified in the context of another.
70. The Government argued
that the measure was proportionate and was largely a matter which fell within
their margin of appreciation. They submitted in particular that the applicants
could have been elected if they had been independent candidates or if DEHAP had
formed a coalition with larger parties before the election.
71. Regarding the argument
grounded on the possibility of standing as an independent candidate, the Court
emphasises the irreplaceable contribution made by parties to political debate,
in which they can be distinguished from other political actors such as
independent candidates, who in general are locally based. In representative
democracies political parties represent the different shades of opinion to be
found within a country’s population, thus contributing to “the free expression
of the opinion of the people” (see, in particular, United Communist
Party of Turkey and Others, cited above, §§ 44 and 45).
72. As
regards the possibility of forming a coalition with other political parties
with the aim of getting over the 10% hurdle, it should be noted that section 16
of Law no. 2839 prevents parties from presenting joint lists and from
participating in parliamentary elections by forming perfectly legal coalitions
(see paragraph 26 above). Although in the past some small groupings did gain
access to the National Assembly under the banner of larger parties (see
paragraph 18 above), it must not be forgotten that the sole aim of these
provisional alliances was to circumvent that statutory prohibition and that
they merely illustrate a weak point in the Turkish electoral system.
73. Emphasising
in that connection the crucial role played in a representative democracy by
parliament, which is the main instrument of democratic control and political
responsibility, and must reflect as faithfully as possible the desire for a
“truly democratic political regime”, the Court observes that after the
elections of 3 November 2002 the electoral system concerned, which has a high
threshold without any possibility of a counterbalancing adjustment, produced in
Turkey the least representative parliament since the introduction of the
multi-party system in 1946 (see paragraph 13 above). In concrete terms,
45.3% of the electorate (about 14.5 million voters) is completely
unrepresented in parliament.
74. However,
an analysis of the results of the parliamentary elections held since the
adoption of the threshold (see paragraphs 14 and 17‑20 above) shows
that it cannot as such block the emergence of political alternatives within
society. Equally, the Court notes with interest the Government’s argument that
the threshold is intended to give small groupings the opportunity to establish
themselves nationally and thus form part of a national political project.
75. It
should also be pointed out that Article 67 § 6 of the Constitution (see
paragraph 22 above) requires electoral laws to strike a
balance between the principles of fair representation and governmental
stability. In its judgment of 18 November 1995 the
76. Admittedly, in view of
the extreme diversity of electoral systems adopted by the Contracting States,
and taking into account the fact that many countries using one or other variant
of proportional representation have national thresholds for election to
parliament (see paragraphs 35‑39 above), the Court must accept that in
the present case the Turkish authorities (both judicial and legislative) – but
also Turkish politicians – are best placed to assess the choice of an
appropriate electoral system, and it cannot propose an ideal solution which
would correct the shortcomings of the Turkish electoral system. The fact
remains, however, that the 10% national threshold applied in
77. Consequently, while
noting that it would be desirable for the threshold complained of to be lowered
and/or for corrective counterbalances to be introduced to ensure optimal
representation of the various political tendencies without sacrificing the
objective sought (the establishment of stable parliamentary majorities), the
Court considers that it is important in this area to leave sufficient latitude
to the national decision-makers. In that connection, it also attaches
importance to the fact that the electoral system, including the threshold in
question, is the subject of much debate within Turkish society and that
numerous proposals of ways to correct the threshold’s effects are being made
both in parliament and among leading figures of civil society (see paragraph 21
above). What is more, as early as 1995 the
78. In the light of the above
conclusions, the Court does not consider that
79. Accordingly,
there has been no violation of Article 3 of Protocol
No. 1.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT
Holds by five
votes to two that there has been no violation of Article 1 of Protocol No.
1.
Done in French, and notified in writing on
30 January 2007 pursuant to Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
S. Dollé J.-P.
Costa
Registrar President
In
accordance with Article 45 § 2 of the Convention and Rule 74 § 2 of the Rules
of Court, the joint dissenting opinion of Mr Cabral Barreto and Mrs Mularoni is
annexed to this judgment.
JOINT DISSENTING OPINION OF JUDGES
CABRAL BARRETO AND MULARONI
(Translation)
We cannot agree with the majority’s finding
that there has been no violation of Article 3 of Protocol No. 1.
We consider it useful to summarise the
general principles applied in the case-law of the Convention institutions on
that provision, which are recapitulated in paragraphs 57 to 65 of the judgment:
(1) Article 3 of Protocol No. 1
guarantees individual rights, including the right to vote and the right to
stand for election;
(2) the rights guaranteed by
Article 3 of Protocol No. 1 are crucial to establishing and maintaining the
foundations of a meaningful democracy governed by the rule of law;
(3) Contracting States must be
allowed a margin of appreciation in this matter, at least so long as the chosen system
provides for conditions which will ensure the free expression of the opinion of
the people in the choice of the legislature;
(4) it is for the Court to
determine in the last resort whether the requirements of Article 3 of Protocol
No. 1 have been complied with; it has to satisfy itself that limitations do not
curtail the rights in question to such an extent as to impair their very
essence, and deprive them of their effectiveness; that they are imposed in
pursuit of a legitimate aim; and that the means employed are not
disproportionate.
It is therefore surely not for the Court to
say whether one electoral system is better than another, seeing that any
electoral system has advantages and disadvantages, that there is no “perfect”
system and that nobody can avoid the phenomenon of “wasted votes”. However, the
Court has a duty, in our opinion, to determine in the last resort whether the
conditions imposed on the exercise of the right concerned satisfy the
requirements of our case-law (see, among other authorities, Mathieu-Mohin and Clerfayt v. Belgium,
judgment of 2 March 1987, Series A no. 113). In our view that means that we
should consider the electoral system as a whole.
We are perfectly aware that many countries
which have adopted proportional representation systems have at the same time
laid down thresholds for the election of political parties to parliament, in
order to ensure governability. We acknowledge without hesitation that this is a
legitimate aim. However, we consider that a problem can arise from the
proportionality point of view when the threshold concerned is too high.
All previous cases about electoral thresholds
brought to the attention of the Strasbourg institutions have concerned
thresholds at a level generally accepted in Europe, that is thresholds of about
5%; it is regrettable that the
majority avoided
saying that in the judgment. In the only case of this kind examined by the
Court (Federación nacionalista Canaria v.
“[T]he second paragraph of the first
transitional provision of the Canary Islands’ Statute of Autonomy ... lays down
two alternative conditions: either at least 30% of all valid votes must be
obtained in an individual constituency or at least 6% of all valid votes must
be obtained in the Autonomous Community as a whole. [The Court] considers that
a system of that kind, far from hindering election candidates such as those put
forward by the applicant federation, affords smaller political groups a certain
degree of protection.”
In
But as Article 3 of Protocol No. 1 does not
impose specific conditions we consider it important to take the Turkish
electoral system as a whole.
We note that this system, which sets a very
high national threshold for the election of a political party to parliamentary
seats, has no corrective counterbalances.
The Government put forward the following two
arguments in seeking to persuade the Court that, although the 10% threshold was
high in relation to the thresholds generally adopted, the system as a whole was
“proportionate”:
(a) the applicants could have been
elected if they had been independent candidates;
(b) the applicants could have been
elected if DEHAP had entered into a coalition before the election with the
larger parties.
On both points we fully share the
considerations expressed by the majority in paragraphs 71 to 73 of the
judgment: neither argument is persuasive, and the second is even incorrect.
Moreover, at the hearing, the applicants’ representative
mentioned a bill currently the subject of political debate in
It would admittedly be naïve to take the view
that the result of the 2002 election, and in particular the fact that 45.3% of
the votes cast were not reflected in the composition of the National Assembly,
was solely due to the electoral system: there is no doubt that the electorate
wanted to send a clear signal to the parties which had been in the power in the
previous parliament. The fact remains, however, that the electoral threshold –
twice as high as the European average – and the lack of corrective
counterbalances do not help to ensure “the free expression of the opinion of
the people in the choice of the legislature”. In addition, the current system
does not permit political parties which are very strong at regional level but
less so nationally to win seats in parliament. In a large country we consider
it very regrettable to prevent political parties which represent millions of
voters from entering the national legislature.
One could argue that in majority-vote systems
the distribution of seats in relation to the results obtained may sometimes be
much more unfavourable than in a proportional representation system which has
an electoral threshold (in the present case, a high one). Nevertheless, in
majority-vote systems, in principle, all political parties of any importance at
national or regional level are represented in parliament, and for us that is
decisive for the purposes of Article 3 of Protocol No. 1.
Like the majority, and in accordance with the
case-law of the Convention institutions, we consider that in this area States
have a very wide margin of appreciation; however, we take the view that in the
present case that margin of appreciation was exceeded and that the degree of
latitude which the majority have given to the respondent State is excessive.
We remain convinced that this case would
warrant examination by the Grand Chamber, as the issues it raises are serious
and new.
In our view, the Turkish electoral system,
which lays down a national threshold of 10% without any corrective
counterbalances, raises such a problem under Article 3 of Protocol No. 1 that
there has been a violation of that provision.
Even following the finding of a violation the
national legislature would still have a wide margin of appreciation to
determine how to amend the electoral legislation to be applied in future
elections in the way it judged best for Turkey, while at the same time ensuring
better “the free expression of the opinion of the people in the choice of the
legislature”.
[1]. For a detailed
analysis of the results of the 2002 elections, see Elise Massicard, Les élections du 3 novembre 2002: Une
recomposition de la vie politique turque?,