Belz...
Fiend God
I have no issues with a Liberal minority. Lib/NDP coalition is likely to work for a while.
Yeah, that's what I expected would happen, though I'm disappointed the NDP didn't get more seats, and a little miffed that the Bloc did.
I have no issues with a Liberal minority. Lib/NDP coalition is likely to work for a while.
Does that mean they'll start pushing for proportional representation now?
That's Alberta's fault. But if they ask nicely, I'll forgive them.
Especially the PPC, given that despite their rather vocal online presence produced exactly 0 MPs
I doubt it.Does that mean they'll start pushing for proportional representation now?Interesting that Cons are ahead in the popular vote.
I doubt it.This might be the election that actually does produce some sort of change to the FPTP system.
Parties have to think long term though.... what's going to be best in future elections. This past election may have been an aberration.I can't imagine any party is really happy with this outcome!
The election map looks... weird.I have no issues with a Liberal minority. Lib/NDP coalition is likely to work for a while.
The election map looks... weird.
I know... empty parts of the country with very few people don't really deserve equal representation. But when you look at how each region of the country voted, there is a lot more conservative blue and NDP gold than there is Liberal red. (Looks like the Liberal support was concentrated in a few small geographic areas.)
Map from Wikipedia:
I know there were certain expectations, but it still looks weird.This is entirely expected.The election map looks... weird.
I know... empty parts of the country with very few people don't really deserve equal representation. But when you look at how each region of the country voted, there is a lot more conservative blue and NDP gold than there is Liberal red. (Looks like the Liberal support was concentrated in a few small geographic areas.)
I know there were certain expectations, but it still looks weird.
I already mentioned a few things... I thought the Liberals would hold more seats in Atlantic Canada and Quebec, I'm surprised they didn't get a few more seats in the Toronto area, after Ford pissed off so many people.What's weird about it?
The U.S. elections are also problematic, so saying we are better than the U.S. is a bit like saying Leprosy is better than Ebola.It looks like a less fractured but more colourful map than what we see for US elections.
I don't suppose you know anything about the province in question, right?
I think that when you look at it there is really a divide on rural/urban lines. Cities (not alberta/sask) tended to vote left (Liberal/NDP/Green) while the rest voted more conservative. You really see it in Ontario with Liberal support in Windsor, London, GTA, Ottawa. Even the more rural ridings the liberals won tend to have a larger city (Thunder Bay, the Sault)
Especially the PPC, given that despite their rather vocal online presence produced exactly 0 MPs and failed to get their incumbent leader re-elected (or perhaps because this would be the first election for this party). Had there been a proportional system in place that particular party might have managed up to three seats based on their % of the popular vote.
I'd like to see a shift to a proportional representation system, based on the main geographic regions of the country (Atlantic Canada, Quebec, Ontario, the Prairies, BC and the North), be the outcome of this election. Something to ensure that all regions of the country have representation in Cabinet, and that the political demographics of the country are more closely aligned with the breakdown in Parliament. Because right now, AB and SK are shut out of Cabinet and that can only fuel resentment.
So Trudeau hangs on by his fingernails...
Canada already sort of does that.... While ridings usually have ~75,000 voters, those in Ontario/Quebec/B.C. have closer to 80,000 voters per riding, while the maritimes and territories have under 70,000. This gives a little more political weight to smaller provinces than they would otherwise have based on population alone.US tried to solve the problem of keeping the smaller in population states from being trampled by the larger states with the US Senate where each state,regardless of population, has two members.
Quite a few people here want to change that, I am not so sure because it would only inflame an already divisive Urban Rural split in the US.
I guess the big question now is how strong/formal will an alliance be. Will they go all the way and have NDP members appointed to Cabinet? (Rare in this type of parliamentary system, but possible.) Some sort of formal agreement? Or just ad hoc support on an issue by issue basis?Well, a little more that that. Initially I think the alliance with the NDP will be quite amicable and strong enough to pass legislation. Where it could fall apart will be on environmental issues such as pipelines. If Liberals behave(no more scandals) and the NDP brings down the minority government over one of their not nationally supported pet issues I can see a return to a Liberal majority