AlolanVulpix

joined 3 years ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] AlolanVulpix@lemmy.ca 5 points 3 months ago

The separation of powers (executive, judicial, and legislative), are critically important for governance and democracy.

Branches of government must take care to not unduly influence other branches of government. The independence and impartiallity of the judiciary must be protected.

Simple things you can do, to grow the proportional representation movement—so we never have to vote for the lesser of the evils, have a two party system, "split the vote", or strategic vote

[–] AlolanVulpix@lemmy.ca 8 points 3 months ago

The separation of powers (executive, judicial, and legislative), are critically important for governance and democracy.

Branches of government must take care to not unduly influence other branches of government. The independence and impartiallity of the judiciary must be protected.

Also see: Former PC Party vice-president appointed as Ontario judge. Province appointed 2 former staffers to a committee that helps select provincial judges in February | CBC News

[–] AlolanVulpix@lemmy.ca 8 points 3 months ago

I'm not sure what the answer is to make them good-faith actors

Stick firmly to the facts. Don't get into emotional arguments, because it's a losing game. When discussing electoral reform, use hard data about vote percentages versus seat counts. Show how the system mathematically distorts representation for all parties including conservatives themselves. Present international examples where proportional systems work effectively. Keep bringing the conversation back to universal democratic principles rather than partisan advantage. When they make emotional arguments, respond with evidence, not matching rhetoric.

What's the non-extreme method of getting conservatives to stop hurting themselves and everyone around them?

Push for systems that punish bad behaviour. Proportional representation naturally discourages obstructionism because parties can't gain majority power with minority support. It creates structural incentives for cooperation and compromise rather than trying to change individuals' character or beliefs. Under PR, parties that refuse to work constructively become irrelevant because coalition-building becomes necessary. The system itself becomes the accountability mechanism, not partisan battles or public shaming. Electoral reform is the non-extreme solution because it works with human nature rather than against it.

[–] AlolanVulpix@lemmy.ca 3 points 3 months ago

How would MMP/STV handle a situation like this?

This issue falls out of the scope of these electoral systems. It's like asking "how would MMP/STV handle foreign interference", when neither MMP/STV are supposed to handle foreign interference. So, if what you really want to know is how local representation maintained regardless of electoral system, the answer is to have stronger rules and regulations surrounding elections. Particularly, banning "parachute" candidates, which are candidates that run in electoral districts of which they are not local to.

Can candidates running locally also be on the party list?

Under MMP, no. It would be like if a candidate was allowed to run in multiple electoral districts.

[–] AlolanVulpix@lemmy.ca 23 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (2 children)

To all those who say local representation is important, so we must not implement proportional representation.

How does this justify Pierre Poilievre, who represented Carleton, Ontario, now potentially applying to be a candidate for an Alberta electoral district? This is halfway across the country.

Our current system does nothing particular for local representation.

[–] AlolanVulpix@lemmy.ca 29 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (1 children)

"Politics should not be a lifelong career, and elected officials should not be allowed to fix themselves in the halls of power of a nation... Therefore, I would institute a limit of two terms for members of Parliament" - Pierre Poilievre 1999

"Politics should not be a lifelong career, and elected officials should not be allowed to fix themselves in the halls of power of a nation... Therefore, I would institute a limit of two terms for members of Parliament" - Pierre Poilievre 1999

 

Media Ecosystem Observatory on Bluesky

AI now lets users generate fake images of politicians, but the risks are clear.

@abridgman.bsky.social warns about the dangers of AI-driven disinformation in this election: www.cbc.ca/news/canada/...

 

Fair Vote Canada 🗳️🍁 on Bluesky

The “no consensus” excuse is getting old.

EKOs polling shows Canadians support proportional representation.

What we lack isn’t agreement—it’s political courage.

#cdnpoli #Election2025 www.coastreporter.net/2025-canada-...

 
 

Longest Ballot Committee on Bluesky

Jordan Leichnitz shares a common misconception about how Canadian democracy works on the "Curse of Politics" podcast. Unfortunately it is the ruling party, not Elections Canada, who decides election law. It seems like a crazy set up but it's true.

#electoralreform #citizensassembly

 

Media Ecosystem Observatory on Bluesky

Elections used to be shaped by silence. Now, they’re shaped by what doesn’t show up in your feed. @abridgman.bsky.social explains how Meta’s news ban is leaving millions of Canadians in the dark: youtu.be/RtxQvLTxATQ

 
 

SmartVoting.ca on Bluesky

We continue to see tight races between the LPC, BQ and NDP resulting in a flip-flop of numbers. CPC number is still firm at 120.

FEDERAL SEAT PROJECTION

  • LPC: 191 (213)
  • CPC: 120 (91)
  • BQ: 23 (25)
  • NDP: 8 (11)
  • GPC: 1 (3)
  • PPC: 0 (0)

April 21, 2025 | MOE: +/- 10

#cdnpoli #election #canada

The image shows a "Federal Seat Projections" chart from Smart Voting dated April 21, 2025. It displays current and strategic voting projections for Canadian political parties: Liberals (LPC): 191 seats (213 with strategic vote), Conservatives (CPC): 120 seats (91 with strategic vote), Bloc Québécois (BQ): 23 seats (25 with strategic vote), New Democratic (NDP): 8 seats (11 with strategic vote), Green (GPC): 1 seat (3 with strategic vote), People's Party (PPC): 0 seats (0 with strategic vote). Each party is shown in a colored box with their acronym, current seat projection, and potential seats with strategic voting. At the bottom, the image directs viewers to visit smartvoting.ca to learn how to vote strategically.

 

Green Party of Canada | Parti Vert du Canada

Trop de Canadiens ont l'impression que leur voix ne compte pas, que le système n'est pas fait pour eux. Ils ont raison.

Nous croyons en un avenir où la politique est au service du peuple, et nous ne nous arrêterons pas tant que tout le monde n'aura pas un siège à la table.

A dark green background features a white semicircle at the top of the page. A multicoloured illustration representing electoral reform overlays the semicircle. Above the illustration, small text reads: “Trop de voix sont exclues de la politique canadienne,en particulier les plus vulnérables. Notre système récompense le pouvoir et non la participation. Il fausse les résultats et ignore la diversité de nos communautés.” Below the illustration, large light green text reads: “Le Parti vert croit que” continuing in large white text: “chaque vote doit compter et que chaque voix doit être entendue.” On a dark green background, a white semicircle appears at the bottom of the page, overlaid with an illustration of five diverse people, including both men and women. Above them, large light green text reads: “Nous militons pour une représentation proportionnelle afin que le Parlement soit le reflet de” followed by large white text: “la population, et pas seulement des puissants.” Smaller body text below the illustration reads: “Une Assemblée de citoyens ouvrira la voie en explorant des réformes telles que le vote en ligne, l'abaissement de l'âge du droit de vote, voire le vote obligatoire.” Against a dark green background, Green Party Co-Leaders Elizabeth May and Jonathan Pedneault appear in the foreground. A white bar runs behind them, containing text that states: “Nous veillerons à ce que l'Assemblée soit indépendante, diversifiée et fondée sur le consensus, et à ce que les partis politiques soient tenus de recruter des candidats issus de groupes sous-représentés.” At the bottom of the slide, a second white bar overlays the image. Inside, large dark green text reads: “Il est temps de rendre le pouvoir aux gens.” Light green text continues: “Il est temps d'entendre chaque voix.”

 

Green Party of Canada | Parti Vert du Canada on Bluesky

Too many Canadians feel like their voices don’t matter, like the system isn’t built for them. They’re right.

We believe in a future where politics serves the people, not the other way around. And we won’t stop until everyone has a seat at the table.

A dark green background features a white semicircle at the top of the page. A multicoloured illustration representing electoral reform overlays the semicircle. Above the illustration, small text reads: “Too many voices are shut out of Canadian politics, especially the most vulnerable. Our system rewards power, not participation. It distorts results and ignores the diversity of our communities.” Below the illustration, large light green text reads: “The Green Party Believes,” continuing in large white text: “Every Vote Should Count & Every Voice Should Be Heard!” On a dark green background, a white semicircle appears at the bottom of the page, overlaid with an illustration of five diverse people, including both men and women. Above them, large light green text reads: “We’re pushing for proportional representation so Parliament reflects,” followed by large white text: “the people, not just the powerful.” Smaller body text below the illustration reads: “A Citizens’ Assembly will lead the way, exploring reforms like online voting, lowering the voting age, and even mandatory voting.” Against a dark green background, Green Party Co-Leaders Elizabeth May and Jonathan Pedneault appear in the foreground. A white bar runs behind them, containing text that states: “We’ll make sure this Assembly is independent, diverse, and consensus-driven, and that political parties are held accountable for recruiting candidates from underrepresented groups.” At the bottom of the slide, a second white bar overlays the image. Inside, large dark green text reads: “It’s time to give power back to the people.” Light green text continues: “It’s time to hear every voice.”

 

Jagmeet Singh on Bluesky

Grab your partner, friends, and family — grab a coffee, and GO VOTE!

Advance polls are open friends.

Canada works best when we work together — and electing NDP MPs means that you will always have someone in your corner, fighting for you in Ottawa.

howyouvote.ca

Jagmeet Singh

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