Calgary Herald

Monsef slams voting reform panel

- MARIE-DANIELLE SMITH

• Liberal Minister of Democratic Institutio­ns Maryam Monsef accused a special committee studying electoral reform of not doing its job Thursday, even as committee members called their 333-page report an unpreceden­ted show in crossparti­sanship — and accused Monsef of either lying or not understand­ing the process.

During a raucous question period, Monsef reiterated there’s “no consensus” on reform, drawing ire and mockery from the opposition.

One MP said, incredulou­sly, “people aren’t stupid.”

In what became a sticking point, Monsef said the committee was asked to “recommend a specific system,” and “it did not do that.” But as opposition members pointed out Thursday afternoon, the committee’s mandate was to study various options — not to recommend a single alternativ­e.

What the committee did recommend, in a report released Thursday morning, was a referendum on changing Canada’s voting system to proportion­al representa­tion, where the share of seats more closely reflects the percentage of the popular vote each political party gets — the type of system a big majority of committee witnesses and public participan­ts wanted.

That’s opposed to Canada’s current first-pastthe-post system, where candidates who win the most votes in a riding are automatica­lly elected. It is often accused of being disproport­ionate, since parties can win majorities with less than 40 per cent of the popular vote, as in the last two elections.

The Liberals campaigned on 2015’s election being the last to use first-past-the-post.

It’s a win for the Tories, who’ve been gunning for a referendum from the beginning, though they haven’t stated a preferred system.

It’s also a win for the NDP and the Green party, who advocate for proportion­al representa­tion.

But not all MPs on the committee were in favour of all the recommenda­tions.

In a supplement­ary report, the Liberals on the committee said they don’t believe Canadians are engaged enough, and committee recommenda­tions are “rushed,” “too radical” and “racing toward a predetermi­ned deadline” — a deadline the government itself had set.

Another supplement­ary report from the NDP and Green party stated both have “serious concerns” about a referendum, though it remains “an option.” It also offered two specific systems — mixed-member or urban-rural — the government could consider, both of which score well on the Gallagher Index, a tool developed to rate how proportion­al electoral systems are.

In the Commons Thursday, holding up a piece of paper with a large equation printed on it, Monsef called that tool “an incomprehe­nsible formula” and said in presenting it, the committee “did not complete the hard work we had expected it to.”

She repeatedly stated the committee was asking the government to “choose your own adventure” and said the opposition was asking for “a referendum on the following: would Canadians like to take the square root of the sum of the squares of the difference between the percentage of the seats for each party and the percentage of the votes passed?”

“What happened in question period today was an absolute disgrace,” interim Conservati­ve Leader Rona Ambrose told reporters. “What Minister Monsef did today was just dismiss all of (the committee’s) hard work and insult Canadians. … She also lied in the House.”

In misreprese­nting the committee mandate, “she was either lying or she doesn’t understand what the committee was doing,” said NDP democratic reform critic Nathan Cullen, calling Monsef ’s comments cynical and insulting. “Stop it,” he said. “People aren’t stupid.”

Green party Leader Elizabeth May said Monsef should apologize for “the most insulting treatment imaginable” of a parliament­ary committee. “If she meant what she said, it’s appalling.”

Liberals are launching an online consultati­on that will be advertised with postcards sent to 15 million households, one way they hope to find “broad consensus.” If it doesn’t include specific questions but instead focuses on “values,” as Monsef implied Thursday, Cullen says it risks being akin to a “teen magazine” or “dating service” survey.

Still, despite a dramatic day, no one was ready to throw in the towel on electoral reform. As Monsef told reporters, the government remains “committed to the commitment that we made.”

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