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I agree with most of this thread. There were some comments made about Canada’s electoral system that need to be clarified though.

The population of each federal riding (similar to congressional district) electing MPs to parliament is often higher in the small-area urban ridings than the sprawling hinterland rural ridings. A rough guide would be that urban ridings have about 120,000 people in them and rural ridings between 50,000 and 100,000 in most cases. The same is true for provincial ridings (which are not always identical to federal ones).

Three other provisions in the constitution water down the population of outlying areas even more. Prince Edward Island is guaranteed four seats (out of 338) in parliament, the population there is barely sufficient to deserve one seat. The three territories, Yukon, NWT and Nunavut, all have one MP, but their population in total is about that of the average southern riding.

It’s almost the same disparity for large sparsely-populated ridings in northern parts of the ten provinces. One example would be Labrador, the mainland portion of the province of Newfoundland & Labrador; it has fewer people than any other riding outside of PEI or the three territories.

I think you might find similar population distributions in U.S. congressional districts but of course if you count dead and fictitious voters then the cities really move ahead fast.

We don’t have voting machines in Canada and there is no widespread suspicion or allegation of electoral fraud. The sad fact is that Canadians voted for a globalist regime fair and square. That’s the end game for the U.S., I suppose.

Even so, there are a lot of anti-globalists in Canada. I don’t think it reaches the proportions of some regions of the U.S. but it is probably on a par with New England or the Pacific Northwest. A constitution can guarantee rights but it’s the spirit of the people which is a more powerful guarantee, the old Soviet constitution said some things too, not many of them were ever honored by their governments.


134 posted on 12/08/2022 2:23:13 AM PST by Peter ODonnell (If Arizona held the Olympic Games, Usain Bolt would lose to Joe Biden)
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To: Peter ODonnell
A rough guide would be that urban ridings have about 120,000 people in them and rural ridings between 50,000 and 100,000 in most cases. The same is true for provincial ridings [...] Three other provisions in the constitution water down the population of outlying areas even more.

Word-choice!

It seems that you are actually saying that Canadian election laws beef up the representation accorded low-density rural areas. That country folk get disproportionately HIGH representation.

Am I correct in thinking that?

Regards,

136 posted on 12/08/2022 2:30:22 AM PST by alexander_busek (Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.)
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To: Peter ODonnell

We don’t have voting machines in Canada....
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
You sure about that? I’m not sure about the last federal or provincial election but I know that on the municipal level, there were recent elections. I asked a friend in Ontario to see what kind of machine read the ballot when he voted.... he made note of that when voting and got back to me to tell me they were ‘Dominion’. I can’t imagine that these machines would be used for municipal elections but not for federal and provincial ones.


142 posted on 12/08/2022 2:52:10 AM PST by hecticskeptic (The simple step of a courageous individual is not to take part in the lie. ~ Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn)
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