Of course, I should point out that whether or not it actually happens will depend very much on whether the Conservatives are able to convince everyone else in Parliament (in whose party platforms it is *not*), that it's a good idea, or make it worthwhile for them to support it anyway.
OTOH, I personally would rather them focus their energies in electoral reform on changing to some form of proportional representation for the House of Commons. Unfortunately, they're likely to meet stiff opposition to that from both the Liberals and the Bloc Quebecois, though the NDP has everything to gain from such a change. And the Conservatives and NDP, even if they were willing to stop spitting at each other long enough to work together, don't have enough votes to pass it into law.
For instance, with the same votes cast in the last election, Parliament would have looked like this:
Conservatives - 36.3% of the popular vote: 113 seats (not 124) Liberals - 30.1% of the popular vote: 93 seats (not 103) NDP - 17.5% of the popular vote: 59 seats (not 29) Bloc - 10.5% of the popular vote: 31 seats (not 51) Greens - 4.5% of the popular vote: 12 seats (not 0)
Of course, that's assuming everyone voted the same. The reality is that the NDP and Greens might well do even better than that, since the incidence of strategic voting would probably go down.
no subject
Date: 2006-02-13 04:02 pm (UTC)OTOH, I personally would rather them focus their energies in electoral reform on changing to some form of proportional representation for the House of Commons. Unfortunately, they're likely to meet stiff opposition to that from both the Liberals and the Bloc Quebecois, though the NDP has everything to gain from such a change. And the Conservatives and NDP, even if they were willing to stop spitting at each other long enough to work together, don't have enough votes to pass it into law.
For instance, with the same votes cast in the last election, Parliament would have looked like this:
Conservatives - 36.3% of the popular vote: 113 seats (not 124)
Liberals - 30.1% of the popular vote: 93 seats (not 103)
NDP - 17.5% of the popular vote: 59 seats (not 29)
Bloc - 10.5% of the popular vote: 31 seats (not 51)
Greens - 4.5% of the popular vote: 12 seats (not 0)
Of course, that's assuming everyone voted the same. The reality is that the NDP and Greens might well do even better than that, since the incidence of strategic voting would probably go down.