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Angelo Elias; Denis Monière
At the time
this article was written Denis Monière was a professor and Angelo Elias an
MA student in the Political Science
Department of the Université de Montréal.
Since the introduction of televised
parliamentary debates the Internet is likely the technological invention that
will most influence parliamentarians’ work, by modifying the relationship
between them and their constituents. This new form of two-way
communication allows large amounts of information to be disseminated on a large
scale for low cost without being filtered by traditional media. The
Internet can also improve communication between parliamentarians and party
members, lobby groups and the public.
The aim of this research was to find out how parliamentarians use the Internet
in their activities as representatives, as well as what problems could arise
from the use of this new technology. We looked at previous work from the
United States and France that found parliamentarians use the Internet in a
conventional manner and seldom take advantage of the potential for
interactivity.
Owen, Davis and Strickler’s study
(1999)1 is based on a 1996 survey answered by
15% of Members of Congress. It found that the respondents used the
Internet mostly as a personal promotional tool and seldom used its
interactivity features. The authors point out the problems caused by
e-mail management. The Internet has caused an increase in the volume of letters
received from the public. Political staff said they were swamped by the
influx of mail because they did not have the necessary resources to answer all
of the letters within a reasonable time. In addition, because the
Internet offers both private citizens and organizations a cheap way of mass
distributing large amounts of information, Members of Congress received many
letters from people outside of their electoral district (about 50% of all received
messages). Participants in the study also said that e-mail messages
tended to be more spontaneous and less restrained than non-electronic mail
because the Internet lessens inhibitions.
Eighteen per cent of the French
National Assembly2
(103 deputies) participated in the study conducted by the French gateway,
Netpolitique, in July 2001.
Ninety per cent of the deputies had an
e-mail address in their constituency office and 70% had one at their office at
the National Assembly. Of the various Internet uses available, the
deputies used e-mail the most, followed by documentary research and Web surfing
on institutional sites. However, the Internet correspondence mostly
comprised internal communication between deputies and their assistants, which
seemed much more significant than exchanges with the public. In fact, 50%
of the respondents said that they received fewer than 50 e-mails a week, which
is less than the average number a French worker receives. “Although the
Internet has become a work tool for parliamentarians, it has not yet become a
communication tool.”
We thus set about finding out the
attitude of Quebec MPs in the House of Commons and of Members of Quebec’s
National Assembly towards the Internet, their use of Internet connections, their
e-mail management, the importance they attach to having a personal Web site,
and the way they perceive the impact of the Internet on the relationship
between elected representatives and the public.
Table 1
Uses of Internet Connections
|
|
E-mail
|
Documentary Research
|
Visits to Institutional Web sites
|
Information on Current Events
|
Often
|
89%
|
63%
|
59%
|
57%
|
Sometimes
|
6%
|
30%
|
37%
|
33%
|
Seldom
|
3%
|
7%
|
3%
|
9%
|
Never
|
1%
|
0%
|
1%
|
1%
|
Methodology
The study was conducted between October
15 and November 15, 2001. Two hundred questionnaires were sent to
provincial and federal parliamentarians. We received back 71
questionnaires, for a response rate of 35.5%. This high response rate
indicates parliamentarians’ level of interest in this issue. We heard
from 42 MNAs and 29 MPs. Our sample also includes nine Ministers (six at
the provincial level and three at the federal level). The distribution of
the respondents by party affiliation is as follows: 23 from the
Parti Québécois, 18 from the Quebec Liberal Party, 1 from the Action
démocratique du Québec, 8 from the Liberal Party of Canada, and 21 from the
Bloc Québécois. Aside from the under-represented Liberal Party of Canada,
this distribution corresponds to the parties’ representation.
The questionnaire consisted of 20
questions covering 32 topics. The first two questions dealt with Internet
connections and their uses. The next 13 questions were on e-mail use, and
questions 16, 17 and 18 dealt with the MPs’ personal Web sites and their view
of the Internet within the democratic process. The last two questions
dealt with their party affiliation and their status as either a private Member
or a Minister.
Internet Connections and Their Uses
All of the Quebec parliamentarians have
an Internet connection at their parliamentary office and at their constituency
offices. They are better equipped than their French counterparts in this
respect: In addition, more than 79% of Quebec parliamentarians had Internet
connections at home, which is distinctly higher than the 53% of Quebec
households that do. They are also more connected than the French; only
35% of French households have an Internet connection.
Quebec private Members use e-mail most
often, as do their French counterparts. Private Members and Ministers
make similar use of the Internet, with the exception of documentary research,
which is done more often by private Members than by Ministers. Only 33%
of the latter use this function, compared with 67% of the former. This is
because Ministers have a larger staff than do private Members.
Use and View of E-mail
Ninety-six per cent of respondents said
that e-mail is fairly or very important in the execution of their duties.
Thirty-one per cent said they received between 10 and 50 e-mails a week,
23% received between 50 and 100, and 44% received more than 100. Only 13%
of French respondents fit into this last category. It seems that e-mail
management has become a daily task for parliamentarians. Private Members
received the largest number of e-mails, since 48% of them passed the 100 mark,
compared with only 22% of Ministers, who are less solicited by their
constituents. Another interesting fact is that MPs received the greatest
number of e-mails every week. Ninety-three per cent of them said they
receive more than 100 e-mails a week, compared with only 10% of MNAs.
This can be explained by the fact that MPs serve a larger electorate than
do their provincial counterparts.
Table 2
Use of E-mail by Private Members
|
|
Newspapers
|
Party Members
|
Citizens’ Groups
|
Other Private Members
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Ministers
|
Often
|
11%
|
11%
|
13%
|
54%
|
20%
|
Sometimes
|
36%
|
40%
|
59%
|
29%
|
23%
|
Seldom
|
33%
|
23%
|
23%
|
17%
|
33%
|
Never
|
20%
|
26%
|
16%
|
0
|
24%
|
In addition, it seems that e-mail is
becoming more popular than traditional postal mail; 82% of respondents said
they received as many e-mails as letters, if not more. This tendency is
more pronounced among private Members than among Ministers. Ninety-seven
per cent of respondents said they checked their e-mail at least once a day.
However, a large majority of private Members do not manage the influx of
e-mails themselves. Rather, the task is given to their political staff.
Eighty-seven per cent of respondents said that they answered the e-mails
they receive from their electors, but this percentage drops to 62% for e-mails
that come from outside of their riding. This trend is the same as that of
Members of Congress: only half of them said they answered e-mails from outside
their electoral districts. However, it should be noted that more
Ministers (77%) answer messages from outside their electoral districts.
This difference can be explained by the fact that Ministers’ functions
take them beyond their riding’s boundaries.
The time parliamentarians take to
respond to e-mails is a problem. Only 23% respond within two days.
The majority of them (58%) take up to a week to reply, which may be considered
too long by net users who expect quasi-immediate responses. According to
Michel Cailloux of the Canadian Information Office, although 87% of the public
expect a response to a letter within two weeks of having sent it, 90% expect an
answer to an e-mail within four hours of having sent it3. Ministers are faster in this
respect; 44% of them answer e-mails within two days.
Unlike the representatives in the study
of the American Congress, who considered e-mail to be less useful and of a
poorer quality than post mail, 89% of Quebec parliamentarians think that the
quality of e-mail messages is just as good as that of traditional mail, and
more than two-thirds say that they think them to be as important as traditional
mail because their contents are as articulate and precise as letters received
in the mail.
How do Parliamentarians Use E-mail?
This table shows that in Quebec as in
the United States, parliamentarians use the Internet more for internal than
external communication because they use it most often to communicate with other
parliamentarians and only occasionally with the media, party members, or lobby
groups. A closer inspection reveals that private Members communicate more
often with each other than do Ministers, with 87% of private Members saying
that they often or sometimes use e-mail to contact other private Members,
compared with 44% of Ministers who do. Also, federal respondents use
e-mail more often than provincial ones to exchange information with newspapers
(17% and 7%, respectively) and lobby groups (17% and 10%, respectively).
|
Will Improve the Democratic Process
|
Will Improve the Control of Institutions
|
Will Improve the Relationship Between
Elected Representatives and the Public
|
Agree
|
35%
|
16%
|
26%
|
Somewhat
agree
|
38%
|
32%
|
52%
|
Somewhat
disagree
|
15%
|
32%
|
12%
|
Disagree
|
3%
|
9%
|
0
|
The Internet and the Democratic Process
Overall, Quebec parliamentarians can be
considered cyber-optimists and seem to have a positive view of the role the Internet
can play within the democratic process.
In two of the three positions offered
to the respondents, the Ministers were more optimistic than the private Members
about the benefits of the Internet; 100% of the former thought that the use of
the Internet will help improve the democratic process, compared with 69% of the
private Members. In addition, 89% of the Ministers thought that the
Internet will allow for better control of institutions, whereas only 42% of
private Members agreed with this view.
Conclusion
This first foray into this issue shows
that the Internet is now very much a part of Quebec parliamentarians’ work and
that it is the e-mail function that dominates the communication between
parliamentarians and the public. In this regard, they follow the trend
found in the United States and France. However, unlike their counterparts
from those countries, Quebec parliamentarians have a more positive opinion
about the quality of messages that they receive through e-mail.
This technical innovation, however,
creates new communication management problems, since parliamentarians risk
being inundated with a flow of messages that are not all pertinent and not
being able to respond to them within a reasonable time because of insufficient
resources.
The Internet could improve the
effectiveness of parliamentary work not only by facilitating the relationship
between parliamentarians and their constituents, but also by bettering the quality
of factual and technical information necessary to participate in discussions on
bills, influence governmental decisions, and serve as a bridge between voters
and the public administration. By using the search functions on
government Internet sites, parliamentarians can find pertinent information more
quickly, gain a better knowledge of the issues, and prepare their questions for
the House or their work for committees.
Notes
1. Diana Owen, Richard
Davis and Vincent James Strickler (1999), “Congress and the Internet”
Harvard International Journal of Press and Politics, vol 4, no 2,
10-29.
2. www.netpolitique.net, (2001), “Les députés français et Internet”
3. These numbers are cited by Steven Clift, The E-Democracy E-Book,
www.publicus.net, 2000, p.4.
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