Close X
Wednesday, October 9, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Electoral Reform Referendum Includes Two-Part Ballot Question

Darpan News Desk IANS, 30 May, 2018 11:41 AM
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's attorney general is recommending that voters be asked two questions in a referendum this fall to determine whether they want to switch to proportional representation to elect members of the legislature.
     
     
    David Eby is suggesting to cabinet that voters should first be asked if they would want to switch from the current first-past-the-post system.
     
     
    They would then be given three options for proportional representation and be asked to rank them based on which they preferred.
     
     
    If a majority supported making the switch, the option with the highest number of votes would be implemented.
     
     
    The campaign period starts July 1, with voting by mail-in ballot running from Oct. 22 to Nov. 30.
     
     
    The questions were released today by Eby after a period of public consultation that included more than 180,000 visits to a government website.
     
     
    The province's minority NDP government and the Greens have supported proportional representation that determines the number of seats each party gets in the legislature based on its percentage of the popular vote.
     
     
    Two previous referendums on proportional representation have failed in B.C.
     
     
    Last year, Premier John Horgan said the province's current system is unfair because in the last five B.C. elections, only one political party formed a government after receiving more than 50 per cent of the votes. In the other elections, parties with less than 50 per cent of the popular vote were able to form a government.
     
     
    Last year's election saw the Liberals and NDP each receive slightly more than 40 per cent of the vote. But the New Democrats eventually formed a minority government with the support of the Greens, who won three seats and took almost 17 per cent of the popular vote.
     
     
    The government has said that if a new way to elect members is approved, it will introduce legislation to implement it in time for the next fixed-date election in 2021.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Cities Call For Tax Changes To Address Housing Affordability

    B.C. Cities Call For Tax Changes To Address Housing Affordability
    A group that represents municipalities in British Columbia is calling for significant tax and regulatory changes for a comprehensive approach to more affordable housing. 

    B.C. Cities Call For Tax Changes To Address Housing Affordability

    NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh Announces Investigation Into Harassment Allegation Involving MP Erin Weir

    NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh Announces Investigation Into Harassment Allegation Involving MP Erin Weir
    He says an independent investigator has been appointed to look into the allegation and that while Weir will remain a member of the NDP caucus, his duties will be curtailed pending the outcome.

    NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh Announces Investigation Into Harassment Allegation Involving MP Erin Weir

    B.C.'s Senior's Advocate Says Elderly Still Not Receiving Minimum Hours Of Care

    Isobel Mackenzie says provincial guidelines require 3.36 hours of daily direct care services such as bathing or therapy for each senior but data shows just 15 per cent of all facilities met that standard last year.

    B.C.'s Senior's Advocate Says Elderly Still Not Receiving Minimum Hours Of Care

    'Grind Yourself, Go Kill Him': Telus Sorry For Badly Translated French Tweets

    Telus's Francois Gratton released a statement apologizing to all the country's francophone population, and stating the tweets should never have been posted.

    'Grind Yourself, Go Kill Him': Telus Sorry For Badly Translated French Tweets

    New BC App Alerts Bystanders Trained In CPR To Nearby Cardiac Arrests

    New BC App Alerts Bystanders Trained In CPR To Nearby Cardiac Arrests
    B.C. has launched the first provincewide smartphone app aimed at turning bystanders into potential lifesavers of heart attack victims.

    New BC App Alerts Bystanders Trained In CPR To Nearby Cardiac Arrests

    Shooting At Chilliwack Home, Believed To Be Targeted, Kills 1 Man

    Shooting At Chilliwack Home, Believed To Be Targeted, Kills 1 Man
      Police Says 28-year-old Was Found With Gunshot Wounds And Later Died Hospital

    Shooting At Chilliwack Home, Believed To Be Targeted, Kills 1 Man