FPTP has existed for far longer than three hundred years. No where does it say it is limited to two parties.
Both systems suck. If there were a vote for a benevolent dictatorship I'd do it.I see many incorrect uses of the term "majority" as if a candidate who gets 34% of the votes in a district wins with a "majority" of the votes. Anything less than 50% plus one is not a majority. If a candidate has 34% of the vote and the other two candidates have 33% each then the guy with 34% wins with a plurality, not a majority. This happens most of the time with FPTP, even when the 64% majority of voters hate the guy who won with 34%. This is what FPTP gives you. The Ford brothers are a good example.
We already have a group of underlying pricks who take advantage of bait-and-switch tactics in politics and they are trying to protect the FPTP system that has given them their power. PR is part of the solution.You're just going to have to hope that there isn't a group of underlying pricks who won't take advantage of bait-and-switch tactics in politics.
So you'd give up your freedom to someone who would decide what is "benevolent", and who would make all the decisions for the populace.Both systems suck. If there were a vote for a benevolent dictatorship I'd do it.
No, the propositions currently on the ballot do not "smear" rural representation as before. It is no longer a one-sized fits all proposition. For example DMP leaves the rural seat count and riding boundaries exactly as they are.Not at all. PR is the scenario you describe; cities might vote in a party due to population density that are completely irrelevant to a rural community. A town of 2.5 million might have 10 percent voting for Green while a town of 500,000 not voting for Green at all. Since the big town has so much more franchise there will be seats that represent no interest from the smaller town. PR smears everyone in an area together and assumes they all want the same thing, which is great in a small geographical space or with a small population.
That is thoroughly disingenuous phrasing. It does the exact opposite: it proportionally empowers fringe parties. Meanwhile, it is FPTP that disproportionately empowers non-fringe parties.Also, PR disproportionately powers small, fringe parties
None of these are benevolent dictatorships.So you'd give up your freedom to someone who would decide what is "benevolent", and who would make all the decisions for the populace.
Seems to be the political situation in China, and growing closer to that definition is Turkey. How about Venezuela?
Arguing what would be "benevolent" would soon be a guarantee to a gulag invitation.
No doubt your comment was tongue-in-cheek.
DMP does not mathematically resolve issues of population density. It dilutes it. Also, I hesitate about this system because it will invariably be expensive due to the bureaucracy involved.No, the propositions currently on the ballot do not "smear" rural representation as before. It is no longer a one-sized fits all proposition. For example DMP leaves the rural seat count and riding boundaries exactly as they are.
That makes sense to me: where geopolitics is strong, leave it geographic. Where it is weak (urban) it should represent the blended diversity.
That makes no sense whatsoever. FPTP ties electorates to their constituents. PR does not (DMP just waters it down) The reason why someone wins a riding in FPTP is because majority of those voters in that constituent needs that champion to represent them on key issues, and the minority's concern did not prevail. PR is the one-size-fits-all vote because percentage of voters matter more than the circumstances under which people vote. In a PR model, the small parties who would never win a seat because they can't win support from their locals are now awarded seats simply because from a spectrum of people, they received a percentage of votes. They now have a voice which doesn't really represent interest from any particular constituent and will put electorates into a system based on... what, exactly? A platform or just a numerical process? All Green party has to do would be promote free pot and get seats based on even more farfetched promises.That is thoroughly disingenuous phrasing. It does the exact opposite: it proportionally empowers fringe parties. Meanwhile, it is FPTP that disproportionately empowers non-fringe parties.
Short summary: PR gives minority ("fringe") groups a voice in proportion with the portion of the electorate that shares their views. FPTP completely disenfranchises all but traditional views. I can see how FPTP would appeal to, say, conservative voters who don't give a damn about those who don't share their ideologies.
It does but you're refusing to acknowledge that "their constituents" means everyone not just those who voted for the winners.That makes no sense whatsoever. FPTP ties electorates to their constituents.
There are two neighbourhoods. You live in the one with shitty water supply. 25 people live there.It does but you're refusing to acknowledge that "their constituents" means everyone not just those who voted for the winners.
Trump is an example of this thinking taken to the extreme. He thinks he only serves those who attend his rallies. His constituents are the entire American people, not just those that voted for him. When he calls for "unity" he really means for the "losers" to stop dissenting and fall in line. Compromise and cooperation for the common good is becoming a lost notion in political circles.
Practically speaking, politicians do not represent their constituents. They represent the people who voted for them. So who represents the people who didn't vote for the winning party? Who represents the people who would never vote for a traditional mainstream party?
The candidate PR systems don't eliminate geographic boundaries even in the urban case. Your concern there is overblown:
Increasing the urban riding boundaries 40% to fight radical partisanship, false majorities, and re-engage the disenfranchised seems like a good idea to me.
Willingdon and Burnaby North really don't have that geographically distinct interests, and I doubt the constituents could name one action taken by their representative that makes them glad their ridings were not merged. Things at that level are already more readily served under the jurisdiction of the municipality.
Ultimately the major parties will adjust their platforms to recapture the disenfranchised anyway.
Rural is not so compromised under the candidate systems, and I honestly think opponents to urban PR are disingenuously dwelling on the (false) rural loss-of-representation boogie man to draw attention away from their actual concern: that minorities might actually get a voice (either by electing someone or by mainstream parties courting them back), and the FPTP people just aren't interested in listening to these people's concerns.
Wilkinson's points are moronic because he's a shit politician, but quoting a left-winged publication that clearly has an agenda that quotes other biased sources doesn't make the situation right.
I actually appreciate minority governments. They rein in the more extreme impulses of the ruling party. It isn't just the "fringe" that have extreme views. And I'd definitely prefer a minority government to a false majority. So in that sense diversity does help. And maybe if the ruling party had to face the reality that they'd always have to cooperate to get things done, maybe they'd actually give it a shot instead of holding their noses until they get to re-roll the dice.Wilkinson's points are moronic because he's a shit politician, but quoting a left-winged publication that clearly has an agenda that quotes other biased sources doesn't make the situation right.
Democracy's don't prosper because of voting reform. It prospers because there's a focus on homogenizing needs, increasing an educated class, and ELECTING BETTER PEOPLE. We have so much apathy that changing FPTP to PR will not only not fix the problem, we'll end up electing more losers into power.
"Diversity" isn't going to help us right now. Diversity has made us play identity politics. This entire post has already turned into identity politics. People who don't vote PR "must be conservatives" or "elites"
I agree. But that's not what the modern definition of diversity is. The modern definition of diversity is to discriminate in the name of acceptance.I actually appreciate minority governments. They rein in the more extreme impulses of the ruling party. It isn't just the "fringe" that have extreme views. And I'd definitely prefer a minority government to a false majority. So in that sense diversity does help. And maybe if the ruling party had to face the reality that they'd always have to cooperate to get things done, maybe they'd actually give it a shot instead of holding their noses until they get to re-roll the dice.
"Being diverse" and "Diversity" (the modern defiitinion of diversity that is) are different. You reading two news sources and coming to conclusion makes you a critical thinker.Edit to add: diversity is the antidote to identity politics. Example: when I'm inclined to catch up on American news I read both CNN and Fox News. Not to mock one, but to piece together the centre position from the two (for lack of a better word) biases. I wouldn't call everything they report an agenda, but let's say they de-emphasise things that run counter to their preferred narrative. e.g. Fox doesn't report Trump's no-show on Saturday at the Remembrance Day events outside Paris, CNN doesn't report the lawyers' objection to a non-citizen vote being dismissed in Florida. If you listen to one side, it amplifies identity politics. If you were to force both sides to hash it out interactively you might arrive at something closer to objective truth.
Left-Winged Source is not an attack against the person. Call the person a left-winged nutjob is. The former describes bias. The latter attacks the person.By the way, discounting an argument because of who said it ("left-wing source") is ad hominem. An argument should be dismissed by refuting the content, not the person making it.
The Greens sold their souls for a shot at electoral reform. It’s easy to agree when one side just rolls over on every issue. If it passes, it won’t be anything like this past year.Of all places to find information about the referendum I find it on Perb....
It has been a great read, I do want to thank everyone for their opinions and for contributing to this debate. I find it hard to find information about the different systems and the pros and cons, what may or may not happen if this gets voted in or if that gets voted in. You have all been much help.
As for my humble opinion, I still need to do more research. I am leaning towards PR. FPTP i just don't feel it as being proper representation of what British Columbians want/need, at the same time I do worry that with too many parties governing that they all don't work together and nothing gets done. Although we do have proof (NDP & Greens) that parties can support each other and make things happen, especially if they now need to play more nice with the other parties. I think it's worth a shot to change the system, also I feel that a minority gov isn't all bad as there will be more check and balances.
Of course it isn't "limited" to two parties. It just fails miserably when it isn't.FPTP has existed for far longer than three hundred years. No where does it say it is limited to two parties.
Pretty sure that's been happening for a long long long time now. lol. But I get your point. still I don't believe our current system is not working, when 1 party wins an election the other party is just trashing the other party the whole time and waiting for the next election. They constantly go against the current party and do anything to try and stop anything from getting done. How is it any different? If they all have some power and a say maybe they will actually work out some issues...The Greens sold their souls for a shot at electoral reform. It’s easy to agree when one side just rolls over on every issue. If it passes, it won’t be anything like this past year.
I’m not worried about things not getting done, I’m worried that governments will give it all away just to stay in power. Short term thinking will rule the day because any given government could fail at any moment. It discourages long term thinking and planning in my view.






