TheKwas wrote:Again, it hampers smaller parties abilities to operate. Manitoba only makes up about 3% of the Canadian population, yet I'm pretty sure that NDP spends upwards of 10% of it's campaign funds in the province because relative to many places east of Ottawa and between Regina and Kamloops, it's fairly competitive in Manitoba.
Which is why I suggested that leeway, rather than having funding exactly mirror population. Further, I never said that the leeway percentages I suggested were the ones that made sense; they were only an example.
No, any truly federal party would be largely unaffected by my suggestions.
Exactly what 'new' political party starts out running at the federal level? Even the current Conservatives were born primarily out of the Reform party, which didn't run candidates in Quebec or in many parts of the Atlantic until they became the Canadian Alliance, and even so they never move more eastward than a single seat in Ontario. The greens only started running in every riding and region in 2004 if I remember correctly (even if I don't, I'm certain they started with less than 70 candidates), and didn't run any candidates in Newfoundland during the election in 1997.
Any new party would start out without federal funding anyways, since it doesn't have any votes before it starts. It's a fact of life that there are barriers to starting up new political parties.
Also, there's the small issue of manipulating democracy to fit your political wants. If the people of Quebec, Eastern and Northern Ontario, and New Brunswick want a party at the federal level that protects federal bilingualism and their access to french media (this is a regional issue that goes beyond provincial boundaries, btw), why wouldn't they be allowed in a democracy to form that party? If BC wants to vote in a Marijuana party that protects that province's tradition of getting stoned in cafes from federal laws, they should have that democratic right. Manipulating the democratic electoral system for the sake of political outcomes (rather than merely promoting those outcomes in a democratic fashion) is fundamentally undemocratic.
Furthermore, the best way to make a region feel even more alienated is to shut out their democratically-elected officials, which is exactly what you're doing to the Bloc and Quebec. The west was bitching for ages about their democratic officials being alienated; eliminating parties through legislation would result in the same on a much-more grandiose scale.
This is indeed one of the problems with implementing such a plan as I suggested. I never said that it was perfect. I'm just indifferent to the feelings of a group that says that the only way it can be represented on the federal level by a regional party.
With respect to your francophone example, the provinces involved do have a voice, and the MPs for those ridings have a voice within their party or parties. If, to continue with your example, it isn't an issue that's big enough for a large number of MPs to be elected for that cause, then they wouldn't have a very large voice in Parliament anyways.
All of your examples miss the point slightly. I'm not saying that people can't or shouldn't vote for whatever party suits them best (though I do believe that parties in a federal legislature that are regional in nature are a bad idea). What I am saying is that federal funds should not be spent on political entities that can only ever represent one small region.
Here's a question. If I want to run as an independent candidate, I have that right -- I pay a nominal fee, and as long as I fulfill the basic requirements I can run in any election. Should I get public funding? If not, why should an effectively independent group without a federal platform get funding for a federal election campaign?
73% of all statistics are made up, including this one.
I'm waiting as fast as I can.