• Lauchs@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    2
    arrow-down
    2
    ·
    edit-2
    3 days ago

    Homogenous really? Are you really going to pull that racist dogwhistle…

    Oh for fuck’s sake. If you’d done any reading whatsoever on the subject, you’d know regional/ethno/religious fault lines tend to pop up (and get reinforced) in PR systems. (Germany with the East West divide, Spain has Catalan/Basque, Israel has well, everything and so on.) Even here, you might have noticed the massive urban rural divide in the last election?

    Edit: Denmark is also overwhelmingly urban, some 80+% live in urban centres.

    PR makes even more sense for diverse countries because there is more representation for different voices in the country.

    Which diverse countries are you thinking of that have done or are doing well under PR without issues that would be terrifying to see in Canada (the rise of the AFD, for example.)

    Competition always leads to better incomes.

    I think you mean outcomes, and in a lot of cases, sure but in politics, it doesn’t seem to.

    I’ve given you a murderer’s row of countries that are having huge problems with PR. While the theory is nice, the reality of how it plays out hasn’t been particularly great. Under FPTP, it’s hard to imagine a single issue (say, anti trans) party ever gaining any sort of traction, whereas in PR, you could easily see them get some 10% of the votes and become a force to be reckoned with.

    Do you really want Pierre Poilievre and Justin Trudeau to get away with having control of most of the seats?

    Not particularly but I’d rather one of them or Singh than some murky backroom dealings deciding the nation. And frankly, the reason we can point to Trudeau is because he and his party are accountable for their actions in government!

    I’m kind of stunned that you are so unconcerned that the system for which you are advocating has been fostering Far Right parties that are increasingly gaining power and are almost unworkable in a First Past the Post system.

    • Sunshine @lemmy.caOP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      5
      arrow-down
      1
      ·
      2 days ago

      First off keep it civil, there’s no need to swear. Every region in the country should be represented.

      Which diverse countries are you thinking of that have done or are doing well under PR without issues that would be terrifying to see in Canada (the rise of the AFD, for example.)

      Political parties can ram through legislation with only 37% to 39% of the vote under first-past-the-post, that means AFD would only need to win 37% of the vote instead of 51% in order to gain all the power. That’s not safer for our democracy.

      You do realize if we had an election today the Conservative Party of Canada who have striking similarities to the AFD would win a super majority and be able to ram through legislation without accountability with only 42% of the popular vote. The party has already been hijacked by extremists who are anti-vaxx, racist, sexist, anti-worker, homophobic.

      I think you mean outcomes, and in a lot of cases, sure but in politics, it doesn’t seem to.

      I’ve given you a murderer’s row of countries that are having huge problems with PR. While the theory is nice, the reality of how it plays out hasn’t been particularly great. Under FPTP, it’s hard to imagine a single issue (say, anti trans) party ever gaining any sort of traction, whereas in PR, you could easily see them get some 10% of the votes and become a force to be reckoned with.

      When there are parties that too far outside the mainstream the other parties can work together to exclude them. That 10% cant do anything with the majority of voters being politically centre and progressive in Canada electing a government that represents them under proportional representation.

      Like I said before if a party has poor leadership the voters can vote out them out. We wouldn’t have to tolerate the policies of establishment parties who often refuse to listen to the average person.

      Here you’re ignoring the countries where pr performs well like in Norway, Switzerland, Denmark. You have been cherry picking the dysfunctional countries to suit your flawed reasoning.

      I’ve given you a murderer’s row of countries that are having huge problems with PR. While the theory is nice, the reality of how it plays out hasn’t been particularly great. Under FPTP, it’s hard to imagine a single issue (say, anti trans) party ever gaining any sort of traction, whereas in PR, you could easily see them get some 10% of the votes and become a force to be reckoned with.

      Italy and Israel have quite a few systematic issues with their democracies.

      The Pierre Poilievre Conservative Party is literally the anti-trans party and your suggestions of keeping the same electoral system in place would give him a much easier time of winning all the power with only a minority of the vote.

      But If we had an election with proportional representation we would have a coalition government of the Liberals, NDP, Bloc, Greens and Independents who would have to work together to enact policy being the voice of 53% of the electorate, that’s fairer.

      You have also ignored the phenomenons of first-past-the-post:

      Where candidates have to attack their opponents to win their races that increases polarization.

      Policy lurch where the policies of the previous government are cancelled out by the new government where nothing gets done.

      Not particularly but I’d rather one of them or Singh than some murky backroom dealings deciding the nation. And frankly, the reason we can point to Trudeau is because he and his party are accountable for their actions in government!

      I’m kind of stunned that you are so unconcerned that the system for which you are advocating has been fostering Far Right parties that are increasingly gaining power and are almost unworkable in a First Past the Post system.

      The NDP supports mixed member proportional byw.

      Yeah no Justin Trudeau isn’t being held accountable like he should be under our current system as he still enjoys 24.9% of all the political donations in the last quarter almost matching the liberal’s public support at 23%. His party may be voted out in the next election but only to be replaced with a fascist party that promised to use the notwithstanding clause to suspend the charter of rights and freedoms, do you realize how dangerous and undemocratic that is. I don’t see how cutting off our nose is the best thing we can can do for ourselves. Instead we have a better alternative, so lets do that.

      Backroom deals already happen with first-past-the-post and the far right had no issue hijacking big tent parties such as the BC Conservatives, the Republican Party, the United Conservative Party and the Conservative Party of Canada.