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July 2007
How it works
• Each party nominates its local candidates (as now), as well as a list of candidates for the whole province, in the order that it wants them to be elected. Before the election, parties must submit their lists, and the details of the process they used to create them, to Elections Ontario. Elections Ontario will publish this information widely, so voters will know who is on a list before they vote for a party. Voters will be able to assess whether a party created its list in a fair and transparent way. Voters will also be able to see whether a party’s list has a good balance of men and women, includes candidates from all of Ontario’s regions and reflects the “diversity” of Ontario’s population. Voting systems around the world Single Transferable Vote First-past-the-post PR and socons
“It must be said that some social conservatives see considerable value in PR, as it is a way to get issues, such as abortion and same-sex “marriage,” back on the floor of Parliament, where there is currently an all-party consensus against revisiting these matters. Since MPs under PR are to be selected according to a party list, the candidates must, of course, agree to the party’s position on controversial issues. Thus, there is no guarantee that the issues of abortion, same-sex “marriage” and euthanasia, etc. would receive any more support under PR than under the first-past-the-post system. It is, in short, a very tricky call.” |
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