Politics

Oct. 27th, 2003 01:13 pm
c9: (concentrating)
[personal profile] c9
Here's today's discussion topic: Political reform in Canada (federally).

First Item: In Canada, come April 2004, there will be 308 ridings across the country. Some have 27,000 people in them (Labrador, PEI x 4), while others have 126,000 people in them (Vancouver, Toronto, a couple others). 44% of Canada's population is represented by 37% of MPs. I think we should redistribute ridings more strictly according to population. Elections Canada is allowed to vary riding population by up to +/- 25% of the average or even more in extreme situations. Also, PEI has been guaranteed to never have fewer MPs than Senators (four), despite having only one riding's worth of population. In British Columbia, 22 of 36 ridings have populations above the national average (using a weighted Elections Canada formula). But not a single riding in Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Quebec, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island or Newfoundland meets the national average.

Would you accept Atlantic Canada losing seats (probably a good chunk of them) to more fairly represent the nation?

Second Item: our election system rewards the "first past the post" candidate, meaning that even though 60%+ might vote against a certain person or party, that person and party can still (and often do) gain power. Many suggest proportional representation, but that would mean that in your riding you might end up with a representative from a different party -- how would you distribute the representation?

(as an example: in the 2000 federal election, the NDP received 8.5% of the vote, but only 4.3% of the seats. The PCs received 12.2% of the vote, but only 4.0% of the seats.)

Would you accept a Christian Heritage MP (for example) if it meant that your pick (let's call them the "LiveJournalParty, or LJP") got it's fair share of seats instead of being shut out?

Date: 2003-10-27 10:51 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] c9.livejournal.com
1. Regionalism certainly allows smaller regions to remain relevant, but as taxation shifts westward, and government need shifts eastward, is there any way to counter the inevitable "we're being ripped off out here in Alberta" feeling? Especially in the current situation: the Atlantic provinces are all chomping at the bit for "a new deal" from Ottawa. In the NL election, the Premier-elect is upset that a recent study of the Ottawa-NL relationship does not include a balance sheet. I would wager at least a nickel that the balance is NOT in the federal government's favour. Does the regionalism artificially inflate the power of one region, while punishing another? I agree that regionalism has benefits, but I worry that 127,000 versus 27,000 in a riding is too much of a gap.

2. I fear that any system that includes true proportiona representation, even partially, becomes too mathematically complex for Jean Voter to follow -- further reducing participation in the system.

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