Preferential ballot should be on the list
While all election systems have their faults, the decision to only offer three forms of proportional representation as alternatives to the current system reeks of political manoeuvring.
Both the NDP and the Greens apparently see these election methods as a means to extend their influence on government and hold onto power. For the voter, it replaces selecting an individual to represent them in the legislature with voting for a political party that will do the selecting for them. Not a change I relish.
If, after centuries of service, first-past-the-post must go, then the most equitable alternative is clearly the preferential ballot, where voters list their choices of the candidates in order of preference. On each ballot count, the candidate with the least votes drops out. If he or she was your first choice, then your second choice cuts in, and so on until one candidate gains at least 50 per cent of the votes plus one.
The advantage of this method is that the voter, not the political party brass, selects their representative and the elected candidate always has the support (albeit not necessarily first-choice support) of at least half the voters, and an individual voter鈥檚 other choices continue to influence the election even after their first and perhaps subsequent choices have dropped out of the running.
Why, given its advantages, was the preferential ballot dismissed and only three forms of proportional representation offered?
This blatant manoeuvring should be accorded the rejection it deserves. Better the devil we know.
Terry Milne
Victoria
Wouldn鈥檛 your want your vote to count?
In response to all the No propaganda about proportional representation: Why wouldn鈥檛 a Conservative in Victoria want their vote to count toward something? Why wouldn鈥檛 a New Democrat in Surrey want their vote to count?
This voting system is in use in most developed countries. No population has ever voted to go back. And yes, you do get local representation 鈥 in one of the systems on the ballot, even more local representation. And the five per cent threshold prevents fringe parties from ever seizing the balance of power.
Who would like to see politicians being more constructive, objective and careful what they say about their opponents, in hopes they might get other voters鈥 second choices? We might even get more women running for office.
I鈥檓 not sure what there is to lose here.
Orion Carrier
Saanich
Three MLAs call the聽shots in legislature
No one wants to talk about the cost of electoral reform, but it will be expensive.
I have worked many elections, and it will cost millions to change the electoral system to something different. It will cost tens of millions to fund more MLAs, their salaries, travel allowances, offices, staff and gold-plated pension plan.
Meanwhile, sa国际传媒 needs funding to help with affordable housing, homelessness, the opioid crisis, shortage of doctors and needed infrastructure upgrades. There are much better ways to spend our tax dollars.
Proportional-representation advocates claim that it will force parties to form coalitions, to 鈥済et along.鈥 Ironically, we are experiencing that now in sa国际传媒, with the NDP having to form an alliance with the Green Party to stay in power.
We have a party of three members calling the shots. I don鈥檛 call that democracy. Some might call it a coalition, but it is really tantamount to blackmail: 鈥淒o as my small minority group wants or we won鈥檛 support you.鈥 This is definitely not democracy.
Our tax dollars should be used to solve existing problems. The low voter participation in this referendum is evidence that it is not as important as the real issues. I encourage people to vote No to changing our electoral system at this time.
Suzanne Anderson
Duncan
Majority didn鈥檛 back Liberals鈥 policies
Re: 鈥渟a国际传媒 voters should reject proportional representation,鈥 editorial, Nov. 16.
Many were upset at the editorial. In a radio interview, publisher and editor-in-chief Dave Obee commented that the editorial was designed to make people think and few were discussing its substance.
My concern was with this statement: Under FPTP, 鈥渂y and large we get what we vote for,鈥 followed by: 鈥渁nd if we don鈥檛, we elect someone else next time around.鈥
First, 鈥渨e,鈥 the majority, did not vote for the sa国际传媒 Liberals鈥 legacy of doctor shortages; the real-estate crisis with its links to money-laundering, drugs and foreign ownership; breaking of sa国际传媒 laws on teachers鈥 contracts; Site C exemption from commission review; and a blind eye to campaign contributions.
It鈥檚 true 鈥渨e get what we vote for鈥 when 鈥渨e鈥 refers to the minority of voters casting winning ballots, and 鈥渨hat we vote for鈥 refers to the winning party鈥檚 underlying ideology. The sa国际传媒 Liberals鈥 ideology is economics first, social and environmental issues last. Through FPTP, this minority-supported ideology is delivered through a dictatorship.
Second, while we can 鈥渆lect someone else next time around,鈥 doing so does not reverse previous negative policy impacts. This causes new governance energy to be directed to correct previous errors. Some errors take decades to fix (doctor shortage) and some are uncorrectable (Site C).
Proportional representation raises the percentage of voters casting winning ballots, and promises party ideology tempering through coalition-government consensus policy-making, resulting in proactive policy not needing later correction, and consequently, timely, representative and efficient governance.
Ron Kot
Victoria
PR supporter bothered spectators
I was one of the thousands lining Government Street to see the Island Farms Santa parade. While waiting for the parade to come by, many of us were bothered by an elderly woman wearing a makeshift proportional-representation vest/jacket and asking us if we had voted.
I stated that I had voted to retain the present system. She seemed miffed and said: 鈥淭hat figures.鈥 Perhaps my western hat and mackinaw jacket were not enough to hide my redneck persona.
In any case, it shows that the Greens and the reds are getting desperate to try to swing the vote their way, if the have to make a nuisance of themselves at such a venue.
Dwayne Thompson
Victoria
Citizens鈥 assemblies chose PR
As time runs out for returning our ballots on the electoral-reform referendum, many people still haven鈥檛 voted because they remain unsure what to vote for.
Why not rely on the advice of fellow citizens drawn at random? These people were just like you: Most knew little or nothing about voting systems, but they happened to be picked to sit on the sa国际传媒 Citizens Assembly. They agreed to spend a lot of time (10聽months, as it turned out) studying voting systems with lessons from political scientists and others.
They concluded that proportional representation was a better voting system than our current first-past-the-post system. After contemplating mixed-member proportional as a replacement, they recommended single-transferable vote. (Both STV and MMP make up the rural-urban system being offered in our current referendum.)
Because people on the assembly were picked at random, they represent what the entire population of sa国际传媒 would have chosen had we all taken 10聽months to study voting systems. It is no surprise, therefore, that every citizens鈥 assembly or commission (there are about 10 of them) that has subsequently studied voting systems across sa国际传媒 has come to the same conclusion: PR is better than FPTP.
The random sample that made up the assembly means that if you had taken the same amount of time to study voting systems, there鈥檚 a 96 per cent chance you, too, would have chosen PR (96 per cent was the proportion of assembly members who voted for PR).
Are you still confused?
Philip Symons
Victoria
Government spending growing too fast
Re: 鈥渟a国际传媒 budget on track, province to lead sa国际传媒 in growth, minister says,鈥 Nov. 27.
It was with trepidation and dismay that I read the feel-good story about the sa国际传媒 government budget. Already in sa国际传媒, all levels of government spending are approaching 50 per cent of GDP. Municipal spending in sa国际传媒 grew 43 per cent between 2006 and 2016. And now our NDP/Green government, in seeking to alleviate all social and environmental inequities, is projecting spending for next year of $56.8 billion.
This is projected, so it could be higher. This constitutes almost a 20聽per cent ($9.3 billion) increase in spending over three years since 2016, and 45 per cent over 10 years. I don鈥檛 even want to think about Liberal spending in Ottawa.
Life in sa国际传媒 is expensive now. Get ready for it to become even more expensive.
Les Barclay
Nanaimo