TODAY is the day the Trudeau Government promised to introduce…



TODAY is the day the Trudeau Government promised to introduce electoral reform legislation.

But instead of showing real leadership by improving Canadian democracy, Mr. Trudeau didn’t even allow the consultation to run its course but unilaterally overruled:

• his own Liberal Party, which overwhelmingly supported adopting electoral reform, and

• all the Canadians from coast to coast to coast who voted for parties that promised #ElectoralReform, and

• Canadians who watched the ERRE Committee hearings with experts in Ottawa and some who participated via Twitter, and

• Canadians who did research and attended information nights, and

• Canadians who hosted their own DIY ERRE Consultations, and

• Canadians who attended MP ERRE Town Halls, and

• Canadians who spoke to the ERRE Committee on its tour, and

• Canadians who engaged with Maryam Monsef on her tour, and

• Canadians who made written #ERRE submissions, and

• 383,074 Canadians who completed the mydemocracy survey in spite of its shortcomings

• 130,452 Canadians who signed the e-616 Parliamentary Petition

In his defense, Mr. Trudeau said, “It was my decision to make.”

Apparently, Mr. Trudeau has forgotten Canada is supposed to be a representative democracy. This was not his decision to make.

We elect our representatives because we agree with the promises they make about how they will govern. This is not acceptable.

Nathan Cullen’s Keep Your Promise TOURa path towards democratic…



Nathan Cullen’s Keep Your Promise TOUR
a path towards democratic reform

Itinerary
Saturday, 25 March 2017
Toronto Parkdale – High Park / Davenport
https://twitter.com/nathancullen/status/846028123246415872

Wednesday, 29 March 2017
Kitchener Kitchener Centre
https://twitter.com/laurelrusswurm/status/847531422197874688
======================
TONIGHT
Thursday, 30 March 2017
Guelph

Guelph Electoral District
======================
Saturday, 8 April 2017
Halifax/PEI

Halifax & Charlottetown Electoral District

Sunday, 9 April 2017
St. John’s

St. John’s East Electoral District

Wednesday, 19 April 2017
Sudbury

Nickel Belt Electoral District

Friday, 21 April 2017
Kingston

Kingston and the Islands Electoral District

Saturday, 22 April 2017
Peterborough
Peterborough – Kawartha Electoral District

Sunday, 23 April 2017
Hamilton

Hamilton – Stoney Creek Electoral District

Monday, 24 April 2017
Thunder Bay

Thunder Bay – Rainy River Electoral District

Tuesday, 25 April 2017
Winnipeg

Winnipeg Centre Electoral District

Wednesday, 26 April 2017
Regina

Regina Wascana Electoral District

Saturday, 6 May 2017
Whitehorse

Yukon Electoral District

Saturday, 20 May 2017
Vancouver

Vancouver Granville Electoral District

Sunday, 21 May 2017
Kelowna
Kelowna – Lake Country Electoral District

Canadians are SERIOUS about Electoral Reform!Last night 160…



Canadians are SERIOUS about Electoral Reform!

Last night 160 people squeezed into the 100 seat room at the Kitchener Public Library in Waterloo Region and Library staff had to turn people away because of fire regulations! This event was definitely worth attending… so if you tried to get in or missed it, catch the one in Guelph tonight!

https://www.facebook.com/events/738560259659848/

Unlike Kitchener-Centre’s LPC MP Raj Saini, Liberal MP Lloyd Longfield might actually show up for this one!

NDP MP Nathan Cullen (co-Chair of the ERRE Committee) is crossing Canada with his  Tour:
Keep Your Promise: a path towards democratic reform

I know there are many more events in the works, when I get hold of the list I’ll post it here.


Power vs People

How many votes does it take to get a seat in Parliament?
How many votes does it take to get a seat in Parliament?

It’s hard enough for small parties to get elected under our miserably unfair winner-take-all electoral system.

Although the Trudeau Government won a majority of seats in Parliament on the promise of making every vote count as of 2019, it seems Mr. Trudeau has decided he would rather keep the system so disproportional that Liberal candidates only need 38,000 votes to get elected on average, but the Green Party needed 600,000+ votes to elect a single MP.

But that’s not the only institutional barrier to getting candidates elected in small parties.  The Main Stream Media (or MSM) — that’s the big TV networks and the major newspapers — support the status quo too.  Face it, it is a lot easier for them to give the lion’s share of the media coverage to only two candidates.  In a country where the single biggest advertiser is our government, the MSM knows which side butters their bread.  Nor does it stop there, as the Toronto Star tells us that’s just the tip of the iceberg: there are subsidies and tax breaks galore. (As a recipient of many of those government tax dollars, the Star is, unsurprisingly a big supporter.  Oh, and let’s not forget bail outs.  After doubling his own salary in 2013Postmedia’s Godfrey wants lifeline of tax breaks, bigger government ad spending,and then the poor man was forced to accept nearly a million dollars as a “retention bonus.”   Although the alternative media explains Government bailout of corporate media is not the solution to our crisis there is not a lot of listening going on.  Is it any wonder our MSM supports the status quo?

2017 By-elections

Although there are rules, small parties and independent candidates continue to get short shrift during elections.

The problem we often lose sight of is that when small parties and independent candidates get short shrift, it means voters do too. The reason small parties come to exist because citizens feel unrepresented by the big parties.  But every year it gets harder and harder to elect anyone else.

Voters need need to know who all the candidates who want to represent them in Ottawa are.  They need to know what’s actually on the menu so they don’t have to settle for second best.  But even voters who support the big parties have problems getting the representation they want from the inside.  When a party foists it choice of a candidate on an Electoral District Association it’s called “parachuting in” a candidate.  This top down process deprives the party members at the local level from choosing for themselves who will run in the election under their party.

In spite of Prime Minister Trudeau’s initial “real change” commitment to keeping his hands off the candidate nomination process in his own party, his fingerprints have been all over them pretty much from the start.  And it’s still happening.  You know it’s bad when the local Liberal candidates ends up publicly complaining about it in the MSM, as happened when PM Trudeau decided to impose one of his assistants on Markham—Thornhill.

Even when voters back the candidate they support in the Party they want, they can still find themselves disappointed or even feeling betrayed when the government they wanted turns its back on its commitments.

Big Guns

During a regular federal election, Prime Ministers and Party Leaders have their own campaigns to run, but they carve out some time here and there to drop in on candidates across the country to lend their name brand support to the electoral contest.  During a By-election period, they don’t have their own campaigns to run; which is how both the Prime Minister and Opposition Party Leader wound up in Calgary, stumping for their respective candidates in ridings recently vacated by ex-Prime Minister Stephen Harper and ex-cabinet minister Jason Kenney (newly elected Alberta’s provincial Conservative Party leader).

Guess which party’s candidates are getting the most press?

Fair Representation

Democracy is supposed to give citizens a say in our own governance.

But when we don’t have equal and effective votes, we don’t get fair representation.

When the deck is stacked in favour of the big political parties so only their candidates can get elected, we can’t get fair representation.

When a political system doesn’t work for a majority of the voters, people stop voting so they get no representation.

Or when people are afraid to vote for who they want and vote for someone they don’t want to stop someone they hate from getting elected, there is no longer any hope for fair representation.

Without fair representation, democracy stops being democracy.

Mr. Trudeau has disavowed his promise for electoral reform, but that is not his decision to make.  It’s ours.  So we need to keep pressuring them.  If the Liberals fail to win any of the 5 By-elections, it would certainly be a very clear message to Mr. Trudeau.  And I’ve no doubt it would increase our chance of getting the promised Proportional Representation.

Smart Voting Tips:

  1. If we really want real change, we need to start voting for politicians who will actually deliver it.
  2. We need to vote… even the disenchanted need to vote.  Do you know, more people didn’t vote than voted for the Trudeau Government?  If all the eligible voters who don’t vote would vote, we would see real real change.
  3. The first thing to remember that opinion polls are just the opinions of a tiny sample of people, kind of like the surveys they cite on Family Feud.  Don’t vote for anyone but the candidate you want.
  4. Even votes that don’t count have power.
  5. The more voters who give up in frustration, the easier it is for the defenders of the status quo to keep things from changing.
  6. Unless we start voting for what we want, we will never get it.

Power To The People

Right now there is a shade more than a week left before the 2017 By-elections will be decided on April 3rd.  There aren’t enough by-elections to change the balance of power in Ottawa, so the usual arguments for strategic voting have no power.  Which means vote for what you want.

If there is a By-election in your riding, find out who your choices are.  You can even volunteer for the candidate you like best, and maybe even help her win.

I imagine there are a fair number of Liberal supporters living in Markham—Thornhill who are annoyed to have local candidates cast aside to make way for one of the PM’s friends.  Such shenanigans undermine the local representation Canadians want.  This would be an excellent time for angry Liberals to swing their votes.  

If I were a Markham—Thornhill voter, I’d be volunteering for Caryn Bergmann because she supports the things I do… including Electoral Reform and Climate Action, and I think she will fight for them in Ottawa.  But I’m not, so all I can do is cheer her on from the peanut gallery.

If you are a Markham—Thornhill voter, I urge you to attend Thursday’s All Candidates Debate to get a good look at the choices.  Find out where they stand, decide who will best represent you.

Then vote.

It’s time to take back our democracy.

 

 


Pies Inspired By Bardish #4In the final pie we see clearly the…



Pies Inspired By Bardish #4

In the final pie we see clearly the Liberal election result in 2015 nearly perfectly mirrors the Conservative election result in 2011.  

The only difference is that now the Liberal Party holds all the power, although it only earned 39% of the vote.  

As Bardish tells us in the video, the Liberal Party voted overwhelmingly to adopt the Electoral Reform resolution her riding association put forward, which is why it became Liberal Policy.  Justin Trudeau and his campaign team chose to adopt this policy as the prominent campaign promise Bardish was so proud of.  And the new Government renewed that promise in the Throne speech (5:13).  But now Prime Minister Trudeau gets to govern dictatorially, (just as his predecessor did).  He has unilaterally gone back on a promise his own party overwhelmingly supported that he might keep the disproportional power he acquired in the unfair electoral system he vowed to replace.  

First Past The Post is as unfair today as it ever was.  It seems Mr. Trudeau’s Liberal Party doesn’t mind treating Canadians unfairly if they benefit.  

Not real change after all.

#KeepYourPromise

Pies Inspired By Bardish #3The point, of course, is that…



Pies Inspired By Bardish #3


The point, of course, is that everything the now Honourable Bardish Chagger said about what was wrong with First Past The Post electoral results in:

Bardish Chagger: An Electoral System Based on the Principle of Fairness

is just as true today.  The only difference is that her party was the winner that took all the power even though it won only 39% of the votes.

Pies Inspired By Bardish #1When I was putting together the…



Pies Inspired By Bardish #1

When I was putting together the video

Bardish Chagger: An Electoral System Based on the Principle of Fairness

I thought it would be nice to illustrate her comments about what was wrong with the current system with a pie chart.  



Then it seemed a good idea to make the pie into a standalone graphic.  TaDa!

image

Liberals *know* Proportional Representation is betterDuring the…



Liberals *know* Proportional Representation is better

During the 2015 Election, Liberal Candidate Raj Saini spoke about electoral reform at the August 25th Fair Vote Waterloo All Candidates Meeting at the Queen Street Commons in downtown Kitchener. http://www.fairvotewrc.ca/2015/08/

Raj discussed his view of the different Proportional Representation systems possible, as well as clarifying the Liberal Party promise to have a new system chosen within 18 months of forming government. Raj told the audience his personal choice for Proportional Representation was Stephane Dion’s P3 system. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TLB5b…

Raj Saini was elected MP for Kitchener Centre. And enough Canadians believed Liberal promises that the party didn’t just form government, it replaced the Conservative Government’s phony majority with its own phony majority based on only 39% of the vote. And yet Prime Minister Justin Trudeau reaffirmed his commitment to replacing our unfair First Past The Post system with one that will “make every vote count” in the throne speech.

The Electoral Reform process unfolded much as Raj said it would in this video. Although four of the five Waterloo Region Conservative MPs were replaced by four brand new Liberal MPs, as it happened none of them managed to host a town hall in which they could speak to Canadians “person to person.” Most of them promised to do their best to bring the ERRE Committee to Waterloo, but that never happened. What we got instead was a consolation prize visit from then Minister of Democratic Institutions Maryam Monsef, which all four Liberal MPs seem to have used as an excuse not to hold their own Electoral Reform Town Hall.

The promised All Party Committee sat through the summer, listening to the expert witnesses Raj had promised, an overwhelming majority of the testimony supported adopting Proportional Representation. When the ERRE Committee took their consultation on the road to talk to Canadians, there was little advance notice of the Committee’s itinerary. And still Canadians showed up. A preponderance of the Canadians who managed to show up also clearly supported adopting some form of Proportional Representation. At the 11th hour, Minister Monsef announced an online survey, but refused to take guidance from the ERRE Committee, instead spending a vast amount of money on a campaign widely ridiculed for it’s ambiguity from coast to coast to coast. In spite of the fact the Liberals never actually asked Canadians to choose a specific system we wanted, we made it clear we wanted a system on which MPs worked together across party lines for the good of Canada – a characteristic of Proportional Representation (something no winner take all system does).

When the ERRE Committee made it’s report, Canadians were startled to learn all the parties – except the Liberals – reached a consensus on Proportional Representation with a Gallagher index of 5 or less and a confirmation Referendum.

In spite of all that support for the Liberal Promise, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau unilaterally decided to pull the plug on his election promise to make every vote count, the promise that 2015 would be the last unfair election did not go over well with a great many Canadians across the political spectrum.

But it is not too late to get the process on back on track.

Unfortunately for the citizens of Kitchener Centre, Mr. Saini has not supported Electoral Reform as he so clearly promised in this video. Although his constituents are calling and writing and visiting him about the electoral reform promise made by both the Liberal Party and himself he continues to maintain no one cares.

Yesterday his constituents held a “Reminding Liberals” rally outside a downtown Kitchener church where Raj and the other three Waterloo Region Liberals hosted a meet and greet for the Hon. Mélanie Joly, Minister of Canadian Heritage.
http://kitchener.ctvnews.ca/video?clipId=1069747

Canadians need fair representation. This issue is not going to fade away.

Learn More about Proportional Representation

Whoa!Canada Proportional Representation 4 Canada series

Fair Vote Waterloo

Fair Vote Canada