Hmmm...maybe Canada should take over the US so you can have the benefits?
BTW - Gilles Duceppe, leader of the Bloc Quebecois (pronounce the c's like k's and you'll be close enough) leads a party that fields candidates in Quebec ONLY. Don't ask me how we got federal representation of one province...makes my head hurt!
STILL want our system?![]()
"Do or do not. There is no try." -- Yoda
Ohhhhhh.....Canada.....I dunno....
K. 5 political parties.
The leaders' debates are coming up.
General rule is that each party must have one seat in Parliament.
Each one does. The Green Party has one that arrived just before the election was called...he wasn't elected, exactly - I think he traded with a Liberal candidate? But anyway, it was fair, and there we are.
SO
The major TV networks - Global, CBC, CTV and another one that eludes me - they decide that Elizabeth May, leader of the Green Party (see photos above) cannot participate in the leaders' debate. Three of the other leaders opposed it (what were THEY scared of?)
Excuse me. As I mentioned above, the Parti Quebecois has voters that are only in Quebec. Yet they form part of the Federal Government.
YET - The GREEN Party has candidates all over Canada, and had a great increase in numbers in the last election.
She's taking them to court! GO LIZ!
This is just SILLY - the old boys' club is alive and well.
"Do or do not. There is no try." -- Yoda
I've only got the vaguest idea of how the Parliamentary system works, so this will be a good learning opportunity. Thanks, Candace!
Okay, now, so this time around there are five political parties and five candidates. So you can vote for one of the five? And whichever one (or whichever party?) gets the most votes wins, and that party's candidate becomes the Prime Minister?
So how often does the winner have an actual majority? Or how often do the votes split more or less evenly among all the candidates running? For example, say, candidate (1) got 21% of the votes, (2), (3), and (4) each got 20%, and candidate (5) got 19%... Candidate (1) becomes Prime Minister? How easy is it then for any particular side to get anything done?
And how many other candidates are running in the same election? Are they elected from various districts throughout each province, sort of like for our House of Representatives?
Stephen Harper looks ..the word that immediately came to mind was "undead," in that photograph of him. Or like a statue on which the eyes have no distinguishing features so they just look empty and flat space framed by their lids.
Pat
Last edited by phesina; 09-11-2008 at 01:33 PM.
WOOT harper LOL... he is the ONLY one who has actually lowered sales tax (even if only a little in ONtario.... 15% down to 14% and supposed to be another % in the next few years) like he said he would. I don't live there anymore but for me the OUTRAGEOUS sales tax was enough for me![]()
the taxes are unreal.
What ever you do... don't let the Bloc in. Just let them seperate... WITHOUT access to our money.
R.I.P my dear Sweet Teddy. You will be missed forever. We love you.
http://www.hannahshands.etsy.com
Some of you seem to disapprove of Stephen Harper. I have no idea what he is as a leader - but he wins me over with one facet of his life. He loves cats. In fact, he and his wife have fostered cats - since he became PM. They even adopted one - an orange tabby named "Cheddar."
Okay, Pat and everyone:
We have over 300 ridings in Canada. Ridings are like electoral districts.
Each party has (or hopes they have) candidates in each riding. Each of the leaders has their own riding as well.
We don't vote for the leaders (unless they are the candidate in our riding).
To avoid confusion:
There are 5 parties.
They have a candidate in each riding (except the Bloc), so each party has 300 candidates each, one in each riding. This means a candidate from each party is running in an individual riding - each riding has 5 candidates.
So, for example, if the Liberals have 200 of their candidates elected (if they win their ridings), then the Liberal leader becomes the Prime Minister of Canada, because his party won the most ridings.
Each of those ridings counts for a voting seat in Parliament.
Clear like mud?
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Speaking just for myself, Harper and the Mrs would be a powerful force in changing lives for pets in Canada.
However, Harper was a Reformer (US friends - extreme right) originally - and a bribe of 2% reduction in the GST is not enough to make me vote for him. It's the PROVINCIAL governments that lower provincial sales tax, not Ottawa.
He broke his own party's law - a federal government law - to have this election. If you want to see real control and evil from Mr Deadeyes, just give the Conservatives a majority.
On the BRIGHT side, Canadians got angry enough that they flooded the other leaders' websites with emails, and pestered the TV networks - and now Harper and Layton (NDP - Major left) have backed off and Elizabeth May will be in the televised leaders' debates! YAY CANADA!
We do have our non-apathetic moments.![]()
"Do or do not. There is no try." -- Yoda
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