Close X
Thursday, January 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

A Look At Proposed Referendum Questions As B.C. Considers Revamped Elections

The Canadian Press, 31 May, 2018 12:50 PM
    VICTORIA — Here are questions Attorney General David Eby has recommended to cabinet for a referendum this fall on British Columbia's electoral system:
     
     
    1. Which should British Columbia use for elections to the legislative assembly (Vote for only one):
     
    — The current first-past-the post voting system.
     
    — A proportional representation voting system.
     
     
    2. If British Columbia adopts a proportional representation voting system, which of the following voting systems do you prefer? (Vote for the voting systems you wish to support by ranking them in order of preference. You may choose to support one, two or all three of the systems):
     
    — Dual-member proportional.
     
    — Mixed-member proportional.
     
    — Rural-urban.
     
     
    Here is a look at the three systems of proportional representation that have been recommended:
     
     
    — Dual-member proportional would take most of the province's existing single-member electoral districts and amalgamate them with a second neighbouring district to create two-member districts. The largest rural districts could remain unchanged as single-member districts. 
     
     
    Parties could nominate up to two candidates in each district. They would appear on the ballot in an order determined by the party. The first seats would be won by the first candidates of the party that received the most votes in each electoral district. The  second seats would be allocated based on provincewide voting results and individual district results.
     
     
    — A mixed-member system would combine single-member electoral districts, where members are elected under first past the post, with seats also allocated on a regional or provincial level and based on a list of candidates running for proportional representation seats prepared by the parties.
     
     
    — A rural-urban option is also a mixed system that elects members of the legislature two ways. In urban and semi-urban areas, a single transferable vote would be used to rank candidates by preference. In rural areas, single-member electoral districts would elect their representative using the first-past-the-post system, while a small number of proportional representation seats would also be allocated from a list prepared by the parties based on election results.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Woman Hopes For Return Of Diamond Ring Mistakenly Donated With Coins

    B.C. Woman Hopes For Return Of Diamond Ring Mistakenly Donated With Coins
    Trinda Gajek was visiting Nanaimo last week when she stopped to ask a young man if he needed some help.

    B.C. Woman Hopes For Return Of Diamond Ring Mistakenly Donated With Coins

    Residents Asked To Reach Out To Lonely People, Invite Them To Christmas Dinner

    Residents Asked To Reach Out To Lonely People, Invite Them To Christmas Dinner
    FREDERICTON — New Brunswick's families minister is asking residents to reach out to people who may be alone for the holidays.

    Residents Asked To Reach Out To Lonely People, Invite Them To Christmas Dinner

    Drunk Man Drives Home An Ambulance Mistaking It For His Audi In Chennai

    Drunk Man Drives Home An Ambulance Mistaking It For His Audi In Chennai
    The businessman realised his mistake when his family questioned him about his car after he reached home in suburban Palavakkam, about 15 km away.

    Drunk Man Drives Home An Ambulance Mistaking It For His Audi In Chennai

    Indian-Origin Bank Employee Jailed For Money Laundering In UK

    Indian-Origin Bank Employee Jailed For Money Laundering In UK
    Jinal Pethad used the 'Dridex' Trojan malware in the scam, which involved the 29-year-old acting as the "personal bank manager" to money launderers Pavel Gincota and Ion Turcan.

    Indian-Origin Bank Employee Jailed For Money Laundering In UK

    Pot Activists Marc And Jodie Emery Plead Guilty To Drug-Related Charges

    Pot Activists Marc And Jodie Emery Plead Guilty To Drug-Related Charges
    Prominent pot activists Jodie and Marc Emery have pleaded guilty to a number of drug-related charges in a Toronto court.

    Pot Activists Marc And Jodie Emery Plead Guilty To Drug-Related Charges

    'Avery Keeps Me Going:' Survivor Recalls 10 Freezing Hours With Young Daughter

    'Avery Keeps Me Going:' Survivor Recalls 10 Freezing Hours With Young Daughter
    Kristen Hiebert has a tattoo on her arm, written in Arabic, that sums up her outlook since the night she and her young daughter almost froze to death on the side of a rural Manitoba highway.

    'Avery Keeps Me Going:' Survivor Recalls 10 Freezing Hours With Young Daughter