My opinion: get rid of confidence votes.
And what would be the alternative? Responsible government? Politicians doing the job we hired them for instead of the rush for power?
My opinion: get rid of confidence votes.
You know either way the Neocons come out ahead in this.
If they remain, they say they have a mandate for every kooky idea they come up with. If they gain a majority, which isn't out of the question with the Iggy puffing up and doing nothing, they go into insanity mode. Really dumb things will become policy. Should they lose control of the House they get to rip the Liberals for years over the deficit, the War and the dumb ass antics the Liberals will get up to. No doubt someone will get caught with their fingers in the pie.
So really there is no losing this election for the Conservatives.
Their biggest problem is a new leader.
I think Ignatieff is a very intelligent person. If he forces an election, he will have a plan. According to the polls if an election were held right now the Libs and the Cons would be tied. If by some chance the Libs win a minority government position, the Cons will almost certainly have leadership convention and Harpo will be history. Then it depends on who they pick as the new leader.
It is certainly not true that the prime minister of Canada is elected. They are chosen, by convention not law, to be the leader of the party with the most seats. But the point is that our parliament is not set up for cooperation.
First, the government gets to set the schedules on bills and declare all of them, even if there are less members of parliament in government than in opposition to the government. So, right off the bat a minority government in parliament is catering to ``special interests''. The only way the majority of parliament can produce bills is through private members bills.
Second, the prime minister (who is merely by convention chosen as the leader of the largest party, no law forces this to be so) has all sorts of nasty abilities such as when to call elections and when to prorogue parliament. All of those private members bills which were the only way that the majority of parliament could legislate (their job) that took so long to get into parliament? Wiped out.
Third, as I already mentioned, confidence votes. In principle this should force us back to an election so that we can put a majority government in power. Nowadays, no particular party has enough support to get the majority that the parliament was designed for and so the confidence vote is nothing but an extortion tool of the prime minister.
Fourth, we vote for members of parliament. We do not get to vote for the prime minister. Some people disagree with the first statement on a matter of principle and call for people who cross the floor to resign, but the fact of the matter is, nothing forces them to resign: you elect an individual. Therefore, we do not even elect the government. Why is this a problem? Because "this is the government the people elected" cannot be true. The government is chosen, by the governor general, to be, by convention, the largest party in the body of parliamentarians. In the case of a minority government this means that the majority of parliamentarians possess less say than a minority of parliamentarians, which one should rightly call, special interests.
All of these distinguishments vanish in the case of a majority government. But the rules for our parliament were written assuming a majority government would form. As it stands now the majority of parliamentarians are unable to legislate properly. The only way that we could ever have a ``cooperative government'' would be if the opposition parties did form a coalition government. Because they would have to cooperate with one another to keep the coalition alive.
So, I am sorry. You may be asking for cooperation, but you are opposed to the only thing that could ever cause it in the case of a minority government.
The thing that burns my butt is the Home Reno Tax Credit that Harper promised but didn't include in the budget. An election will send that into neverland. I've spent over ten thousand dollars on home improvements thinking I would get the tax credit. Another nice mess Harpo.
lol One does not precipitate the other. The majority of Canadians voters didn't vote. That likely means they didn't like anyone or else are disgusted with the entire election stuff or were too lazy/apathetic. If the majority don't vote, democracy is lost because democracy is rule by majority (or mob rule as I like to put it).A majority of Canadian voters did not vote for the Conservatives. Therefore a coalition of opposition parties would represent the will of a majority of Canadians.
Yeah.I don't like Harper or the Conservatives party agenda either. But in order for the opposition to vote against a confidence bill and bring down the government, it should be based on the content of that bill, not political opportunism.... or it has to at least appear that way, or you'll piss off people like myself, who could be open to voting Liberal given the right circumstances.
58% of registered electors voted during the 40th General Election for Canada—that constitutes a majority.lol One does not precipitate the other. The majority of Canadians voters didn't vote. That likely means they didn't like anyone or else are disgusted with the entire election stuff or were too lazy/apathetic. If the majority don't vote, democracy is lost because democracy is rule by majority (or mob rule as I like to put it).
Good point. But the majority of the people that voted chose Con MPs which results in the same thing as electing the party leader, right?It is certainly not true that the prime minister of Canada is elected. They are chosen, by convention not law, to be the leader of the party with the most seats. But the point is that our parliament is not set up for cooperation.
All Canada is is a collections of special interest groups.First, the government gets to set the schedules on bills and declare all of them, even if there are less members of parliament in government than in opposition to the government. So, right off the bat a minority government in parliament is catering to ``special interests''. The only way the majority of parliament can produce bills is through private members bills.
Yeah. That's sad.Second, the prime minister (who is merely by convention chosen as the leader of the largest party, no law forces this to be so) has all sorts of nasty abilities such as when to call elections and when to prorogue parliament. All of those private members bills which were the only way that the majority of parliament could legislate (their job) that took so long to get into parliament? Wiped out.
Yup. Too much power in the hands of a few. It should change, but it won't. Canadians are too divided and myopic to act in concert and force change.Third, as I already mentioned, confidence votes. In principle this should force us back to an election so that we can put a majority government in power. Nowadays, no particular party has enough support to get the majority that the parliament was designed for and so the confidence vote is nothing but an extortion tool of the prime minister.
I am opposed to what? All I said was that Sir Pompass was wrong, basically. The "coalition" of Laymton and Iggy would not have been democratic.Fourth, we vote for members of parliament. We do not get to vote for the prime minister. Some people disagree with the first statement on a matter of principle and call for people who cross the floor to resign, but the fact of the matter is, nothing forces them to resign: you elect an individual. Therefore, we do not even elect the government. Why is this a problem? Because "this is the government the people elected" cannot be true. The government is chosen, by the governor general, to be, by convention, the largest party in the body of parliamentarians. In the case of a minority government this means that the majority of parliamentarians possess less say than a minority of parliamentarians, which one should rightly call, special interests.
All of these distinguishments vanish in the case of a majority government. But the rules for our parliament were written assuming a majority government would form. As it stands now the majority of parliamentarians are unable to legislate properly. The only way that we could ever have a ``cooperative government'' would be if the opposition parties did form a coalition government. Because they would have to cooperate with one another to keep the coalition alive.
So, I am sorry. You may be asking for cooperation, but you are opposed to the only thing that could ever cause it in the case of a minority government.
My mistake. I was probably thinking BC politics (lowest voter turnout ever).58% of registered electors voted during the 40th General Election for Canada—that constitutes a majority.
Pretty much. Personally I prefer democratic republic (Switzerland comes to mind. The people have the final word, not pols. Hubby discovered this while he was reading about Switzerland one time). I hate oligarchies and that is what we have in Canada, democratic or not.I am concerned, however, about the suggestion that mob rule is somehow better than the system that Canada has adopted. Our system enables us to have the weight of decision-making rest with the elected House of Commons (and where decision-making does not rest with that House, other decision-makers account to and are responsible to that House). The lesser balance of decision-making serves as an appropriate temper to democracy, so that decisions are made with a democratic voice, with the wise considerations of common sense and peace, order and good government preserved. ‘Mob rule’, on the other hand, is pure democracy and is therefore unstable and completely unachievable for the day-to-day operations of a government or legislature.
The "coalition" of Laymton and Iggy would not have been democratic.
44.5% of voters is not a majority. Anything over 50% is a majority. At least where I went to school it was.As much as the professional drama queens of the Conservative Party of Canada would have wanted you to think so, that’s untrue. Her Majesty’s Loyal Opposition, supported by the New Democratic Party of Canada, would have represented the electoral voices of 44.5 % of electors, whereas the Conservative Government would have represented only 37.7 % of electors (statistics found at Elections Canada). Given the short existence of the House of Commons at the time of these events, it would have been completely appropriate (though surprising) for the Governor General of Canada to summon the Opposition to form a Government (should the Government have been defeated). Now that the Conservatives have governed for several more months, it would no longer be appropriate to summon a new Government without a general election. As much as it would have been controversial to Conservatives and Conservative supporters, such a Liberal–New Democratic team would have been entirely democratic—they were just as much elected as the Conservatives were (more so, even).
44.5% of voters is not a majority. Anything over 50% is a majority. At least where I went to school it was.
And I don't give a crap what the "drama queens" of the Cons think.
Yup.Then by your logic, the Conservatives should have been denied government at the start.
My opinion: get rid of confidence votes.
In general. We were talking about a specific coalition, though. The one we would have had would not have been a democratic one as the Canadian public would have been bypassed.But, I do like the idea of cooperation rather than the constant smearing each other and butting heads we've had till now. I can't see any cooperation for the benefit of Canadians in the future, though.
Coalitions are fully as democratic as anything else, Anna.
S the right wingers slag Ignatieff for being a coward and supporting the government then slag him for not supporting Harper. They complain that Harper was forced to apply the stimulus and the cry that it is not the time for an elction so that the stimulus can be given time to work. SJP is right, they just want perpetual Con rule like in Alberta.