Oman Daily Observer

Canada oppn says govt fails to honour electoral reform pledge

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OTTAWA: Canadian opposition parties accused the government on Thursday of reneging on a promise to make the country’s voting system fairer after a key Liberal minister dismissed an official report that recommende­d having a referendum before changes are made.

The denunciati­on of the report that the Liberals had asked for could kill the momentum for an overhaul that was expected to benefit smaller parties like the left-leaning Greens, who have just one seat in parliament.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau promised during the 2015 election campaign that Canada would have a new voting system in place by the next election in 2019. Critics say Trudeau is less enthusiast­ic about reform now that he has won a majority under the current first-past-the-post system.

An all-party committee recommende­d on Thursday that Canada should hold a referendum before making changes, something the Liberals have said is not necessary.

The referendum would allow Canadians to choose between the current system and a type of proportion­al voting, although the report left it up to the government to choose which type.

Minister of Democratic Institutio­ns Maryam Monsef, who has been tasked with electoral reform, criticised the report and the work of the committee for a lack of consensus and not recommendi­ng a specific alternativ­e.

The opposition accused the Liber- als of self-sabotage. “Minister Monsef and Justin Trudeau are trying to find a way out of this because they don’t like the answer they got,” said interim Conservati­ve leader Rona Ambrose.

The existing system, inherited from Britain, allows a party to win a majority government with less than 40 per cent of the popular vote. The Liberals received 39.5 per cent vote in 2015 but 184 of the 338 seats in the House of Commons.

Proportion­al representa­tion, used in countries like New Zealand, would likely boost the performanc­e of small parties by allotting seats based on the popular vote rather than by a candidate’s performanc­e in each electoral district, as in the first-past-the-post system.

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