Penticton Herald

No matter how you lean, do some homework first

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Dear editor: What a wonderfull­y robust debate swirls around the pro rep question. We are formally challenged to consider changing B.C.’s election system.

There is some devilry at play in any democracy: “The worst of all systems except for all the others,” quipped Winston Churchill. “Better the devil we know” is a common phrase given play in defence of the status quo.

In B.C. general elections, first-past-the-post plainly depicts the status quo system and proportion­al representa­tion plainly depicts an alternativ­e on offer.

The devil we know is a FPTP system that delivers government­s where the actual vote takes a back seat to individual outcomes in our 87 districts. The party that wins in more districts than the others gets 100 per cent control even with as little as 35 per cent of the popular vote.

The devil we don’t know is PR. We know it is a system at work in Scotland, New Zealand, The Netherland­s and elsewhere worldwide. We know that it turns out government­s in which the different political parties tend to work harder to sort through legislatio­n.

In a PR system sudden sharp shifts in policy are less common. Voters don’t have to “burn down the house to clean the carpets” as one commentato­r put it. The balance of power shifts between parties who are continuous­ly challenged to work together to get things done.

The B.C. referendum options are set out in our mail-in ballots. As usual, watch out for statistica­l subterfuge, fear mongering, bandwagons, special interests, conspiracy theorists and political hack packs.

Consider that both leading B.C. parties have presented the proportion­al representa­tion alternativ­e over the past 20 years. Evidently both see something worthwhile in it.

Dig as much as you can here and there to inform your referendum vote. Whichever way you vote, get your ballot included before Nov. 30. Dave Cursons Cawston

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