The Daily Courier

Not the system, it’s democracy

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Dear Editor: Yes it is true. Proportion­al representa­tion fairly represents voters’ views in the Legislatur­e: 40 per cent of the vote equals 40 per cent of the seats.

Unlike our current voting system that turns losers into winners, 15 of our last 17 elections awarded a party that earned only a minority of votes with a majority of seats in the Legislatur­e.

And yes, it is also true. If more than five per cent of voters support a party that some might call extremist or fringe, that party will receive the appropriat­e number of seats in the Legislatur­e. Consider these questions: 1. Who decides which views are worthy of representa­tion, and which are not? Once upon a time CCF/NDP views were (and by some still are) considered extremist. Are the BC Conservati­ves a “fringe” party with a much smaller percentage of the vote than the Greens?

2. Extremist views are not going away. Is it better to have these views out in the open and its proponents participat­ing in the Legislatur­e where they can be challenged, and their ideas perhaps modified, and solutions found through discussion, cooperatio­n and compromise? Or better to have these views fester and grow, hidden within a big tent party? Or ignored until their proponents create chaos on the streets?

With our current voting system, a few votes can swing a riding, and a single riding can swing an election (Courtney Comox in the 2017 election.)

In the age of social media manipulati­on, our current system is wide open to abuse and manipulati­on by extremist and other elements. This would not be the case with any one of the three proportion­al representa­tion systems on offer in the upcoming electoral reform referendum, where all votes go towards electing an MLA.

Proportion­al representa­tion fairly represents all our views in the Legislatur­e. It does not create or aggravate them. To quote one pundit, if you oppose PR because you are afraid of a certain party getting into the Legislatur­e, you don’t have a problem with a voting system. You have a problem with democracy. Sue Young Vernon

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