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Sunday, October 19, 2008

The Toronto Star Opposes PR, Again

 
I don't get it. Why are the editors of The Toronto Star against proportional representation? Their reasoning doesn't make sense.

Last year the editorial board opposed the Ontario referendum on electoral reform. Their arguments were so stupid and factually incorrect that "Public Editor" Kathy English was obliged to defend the newspaper's editorial opinions [The Toronto Star Defends Its Editorial Policy on MMP].

She didn't do a very good job.

Today The Star has an editorial opposing any proportional electoral system. The paper notes that a nationwide proportional system of voting would have given a different distribution of seats than the result of last Tuesday's election. They note that the Green party would have probably gotten a number of seats.

The editorial states, correctly, that we can't just recalculate the results based on Tuesday's voting because if we had voted under a proportional system people wold have voted differently. They say ...
Furthermore, the analysis is backward looking – transposing last week's results onto a new system. In all likelihood, if Canada had a system of proportional representation, the outcome would be very different, given the demographical and geographical diversity of the country. The pro-life Christian Heritage Party, for example, might win enough votes to get seats. And new parties might emerge to win seats – say, an Alberta First party or even ethnic parties.

So Harper might be kept in power by entering a coalition with pro-life and Alberta First parties. Now that, indeed, is a scary prospect.
This is scary. It looks like the editors of The Star are afraid of proportional voting because (horrors!) some people might elect MP's who truly represent their points of view.

Now we certainly can't have that in a democracy, can we?

The scare tactics are not based on rational analysis of what happens in other countries. Most Western democracies have moved into the 21st century and they find it beneficial to let the people have their say. Sticking with an unfair first-past-the -post system only breeds disillusionment and bitterness with a system that disenfranchises a majority of voters. (Voter turnout on Tuesday dropped below 60%.)

It's time for The Toronto Star to find new editors—ones who are as progressive as the newspaper they work for. The current editors are clearly not up to the job.

But maybe we shouldn't expect too much from editors who put Madonna on the front page under a banner about a rape probe.


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