Re: Welcome To The Depression...
Here is one recommended reform to the elections act that I support
1.2.2 Option to Decline Ballot
There is a growing perception among some of Canada’s electorate that there should be a way in which an elector can register his or her dissatisfaction with the political process by declining his or her ballot. The Canada Elections Act currently does not provide any authority for that to be done.
In order to remain vital and meaningful, the vote must remain responsive to the needs of all Canadians. The time may have come to allow an elector a formal means of expressing dissatisfaction with the political system in a manner that is not only peaceful, but is meaningful as well. Such a change at the federal level would mirror similar innovations that have taken place in a number of provinces: Ontario, Alberta, Manitoba, Nova Scotia and the Yukon – all of which have provisions in their electoral statutes for ballots to be declined and of which Manitoba’s may serve as a model.
Recommendation: The Canada Elections Act should be amended to provide for the means for a ballot to be declined, recorded and reported as such in the official ballot results and which respects the principle of the secrecy of the vote.
My mother-in-law is a red Tory. She worked in Barbara McDougal's office in the eighties. Voted Conservative her entire life. When Mike Harris led the Conservatives to power in Ontario, she voted for him. Within a year she despised what he did to the health system and to seniors.
Come re-election, she could not bring herself to vote anything other than Conservative, but at the same time could not vote for "that MAN!". So, she exercised her only other option. She formally declined her vote.
I respect that choice. It meant that her opinion was recorded, and not just lost amongst the people who couldn't be bothered to vote. We need this option on all levels.
Originally posted by Gary Ruben
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1.2.2 Option to Decline Ballot
There is a growing perception among some of Canada’s electorate that there should be a way in which an elector can register his or her dissatisfaction with the political process by declining his or her ballot. The Canada Elections Act currently does not provide any authority for that to be done.
In order to remain vital and meaningful, the vote must remain responsive to the needs of all Canadians. The time may have come to allow an elector a formal means of expressing dissatisfaction with the political system in a manner that is not only peaceful, but is meaningful as well. Such a change at the federal level would mirror similar innovations that have taken place in a number of provinces: Ontario, Alberta, Manitoba, Nova Scotia and the Yukon – all of which have provisions in their electoral statutes for ballots to be declined and of which Manitoba’s may serve as a model.
Recommendation: The Canada Elections Act should be amended to provide for the means for a ballot to be declined, recorded and reported as such in the official ballot results and which respects the principle of the secrecy of the vote.
My mother-in-law is a red Tory. She worked in Barbara McDougal's office in the eighties. Voted Conservative her entire life. When Mike Harris led the Conservatives to power in Ontario, she voted for him. Within a year she despised what he did to the health system and to seniors.
Come re-election, she could not bring herself to vote anything other than Conservative, but at the same time could not vote for "that MAN!". So, she exercised her only other option. She formally declined her vote.
I respect that choice. It meant that her opinion was recorded, and not just lost amongst the people who couldn't be bothered to vote. We need this option on all levels.
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