Today, word surfaced that the federal parties have agreed not to pass Bill C-12, An Act to amend the Constitution Act, 1867 (democratic representation). The bill, also known as the Democratic Representation Act, would have added 30 seats to the House of Commons--these seats would have been distributed between Ontario, British Columbia, and Alberta. The constitutional amendment was moved by The Honourable Steven Fletcher P.C., M.P. (Charleswood--St. James--Assiniboia), the Minister of State (Democratic Reform).
It has been leaked by strategists for Her Majesty's Government for Canada, Her Majesty's Loyal Opposition, and the New Democratic Party of Canada, have agreed not to pass the Democratic Representation Act due to concerns expressed by Québec caucus members--namely, that the new law would have reduced the province's proportion of representation in the House of Commons (which it would have, closer to its percentage of the population). The Bloc Québécois has also opposed the Democratic Representation Act since its introduction.
The change would have taken place once the next census had concluded (scheduled for 2011). Seats are recalculated every ten years, but the existing formula attempts to prevent the House of Commons from growing too quickly; the Democratic Representation Act would have adjusted this formula, so that faster-growing provinces would be better represented. Here are the number of seats that each province would have, after the 2011 census, with this constitutional amendment, and without this constitutional amendment.
Source
It has been leaked by strategists for Her Majesty's Government for Canada, Her Majesty's Loyal Opposition, and the New Democratic Party of Canada, have agreed not to pass the Democratic Representation Act due to concerns expressed by Québec caucus members--namely, that the new law would have reduced the province's proportion of representation in the House of Commons (which it would have, closer to its percentage of the population). The Bloc Québécois has also opposed the Democratic Representation Act since its introduction.
The change would have taken place once the next census had concluded (scheduled for 2011). Seats are recalculated every ten years, but the existing formula attempts to prevent the House of Commons from growing too quickly; the Democratic Representation Act would have adjusted this formula, so that faster-growing provinces would be better represented. Here are the number of seats that each province would have, after the 2011 census, with this constitutional amendment, and without this constitutional amendment.
- Ontario: 124 with the amendment, 110 without the amendment (+14)
- Québec: 75 with the amendment, 75 without the amendment (no change)
- Nova Scotia: 11 with the amendment, 11 without the amendment (no change)
- New Brunswick: 10 with the amendment, 10 without the amendment (no change)
- Manitoba: 14 with the amendment, 14 without the amendment (no change)
- British Columbia: 43 with the amendment, 38 without the amendment (+5)
- Prince Edward Island: 4 with the amendment, 4 without the amendment (no change)
- Saskatchewan: 14 with the amendment, 14 without the amendment (no change)
- Alberta: 33 with the amendment, 29 without the amendment (+4)
- Newfoundland and Labrador: 7 with the amendment, 7 without the amendment (no change)
- Each of the territories' single members of the House of Commons are unaffected
Source
- The Globe and Mail: homepage / Federal parties agree to scrap bill to correct voting inequalities