Essay On Mmp Electoral System

1080 Words3 Pages

Canada is overdue for an electoral reform. Canada’s current first-past-the-post electoral system is an outdated and unfair electoral system; a Mixed Member Parliament electoral system can solve many of the issues that come about FPTP. The MMP electoral system is a proportional system where the proportion of votes a party wins, is the proportion of seats they get in Parliament. Each voter gets two votes: the first vote goes to the voter’s choice of local representation, the second vote goes to their choice political party. The first major issue with FPTP electoral system is it over-rewards the winning party, leaving many Canadians without any representation in Parliament. Secondly, Canada’s current electoral system promotes strategic voting, …show more content…

Furthermore, small parties often collapse only in the context of an FPTP system because many citizens vote strategically – knowing small parties usually cannot win, so they are usually left deciding between two major parties, which is known as Duverger’s Law. In The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Politics, they explain Duverger’s Law …show more content…

Consequently, parties pick party leaders based on how many votes they would get the party, rather than a candidate who is best qualified or deserving; and of course, the candidates that win the most votes are typically charismatic white male. Unlike FPTP systems, the MMP system has political parties use party list to decide who gets a seat in Parliament. The party list is published and distributed to every household prior to the election. Since in the MMP system one vote goes to the voter’s choice local representation and the other vote goes towards their favourite party, the party itself is not tied down to having one person representing the party. Matland and Studlar explain the correlation between female representation and the electoral system

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