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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 4 page paper suggests that the Canadian Electoral System should be reformed. Suggestions are made. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RG13_SA108can.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
1867 when elections were rather haphazard and highly politicized (Robertson, 2008). Early on, only white men could vote, and there were restrictions as well (Robertson, 2008). Obviously, things changed.
Like the United States of America that would not allow women and black men to vote, Canada would evolve to its current position. And while equality is not the issue,
the antiquated system is. There have been calls for reform and the argument is well made. In delving into this topic, it pays to look at the current situation.
Robertson (2008) provides an explanation of the current Canadian voting system: "Voters cast their ballot for only one candidate. The Canadian electoral system is of the first past the post
or single member plurality type. In other words, the candidate who gets the most votes in a particular constituency is the winner. There is no requirement that the winner get
an absolute majority of the votes cast, or of the votes capable of being cast. " It seems fair on the surface, but when digging deeper questions crop up. In
certain cases, candidates are elected with just a small percentage of the popular vote, but in other circumstances, parties will get a good percentage of the popular vote but retrieve
few seats in Parliament (Robertson, 2008). Because the end result is not always what people might like, a number of proposals have been put on the table to create different
electoral systems (Robertson, 2008). It should be kept in mind that the situation is not simple. The Canadian electoral system is extremely complicated and the system is also
closely regulated (Robertson, 2008). Also, it should be noted that the system continually evolves due to circumstances and does not stay the same (Robertson, 2008). While a positive system, and
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