Many people fear that proportional representation “will dilute the power of
rural Canada. Since the proportional composition of the House is based on the
total number of votes, and urban Canada has far more people than rural Canada,
the urban voice will swamp the rural voice. Further, with far more votes to be
won in cities, parties may pay less attention to rural concerns. The disproportionately represented rural areas
will lose out.”
What do we say when someone argues this?
(It’s
not even true that many rural areas are disproportionately
represented, but I’ll get to that later.)
All communities keep a local
MP
As Liberal Democratic Reform critic Scott Simms, an MP from
Newfoundland, told a FVC webinar recently, he doesn’t want to “lose
that local aspect. If there is one thing Liberals do believe in, it’s that
direct representatives are a true function of our democracy. . . And one of the
best selling items of MMP is, you have a ballot where you can vote for a
candidate and a party. I agree with that. It’s actually a selling point.”
Almost half of Canadians need
their local MP
When many people say “urban,” they mean “large urban.” Stats Can classifies “large urban population centres” as “larger than 100,000.”
So it’s not just rural areas that fear their community will lose their MP accountable to no one else. Small and medium population centres, and even ten population centres over 100,000 like Guelph and Moncton, have only one MP representing them.
We’re talking about 44% of the population of Canada.
Both rural and urban voters
will have fair representation
Second, MMP will not change the urban/rural balance at all.
Fair Vote Canada's principles include “We must give rural and urban voters in every province, territory and regional community effective votes and fair representation in both government and opposition.”
The numbers of MPs from each province stay the same. Within each larger province, the number of MPs from each region stays the same (Northern Ontario will still have nine MPs north of the French River.)
Within each region, three present ridings become two larger ones, or five present ridings become three larger ones. That doesn’t change the urban/rural balance.
The Greater Toronto Area, Montreal, and Metro Vancouver will have their
own regions. Likely Calgary and Edmonton will too.
But in other regions, if about 37% of the MPs are elected by regions,
won’t they all be from the largest city in the region?
No. On the regional ballot will be a group of candidates from across the
whole region, often the same candidates who are running in the local ridings.
Voters in the region’s biggest city will tend to vote for one leading
candidate, the urban star. That will tend to leave the second regional spot
open for a candidate from a smaller community. Furthermore, that leading urban
star will quite likely win his or her local riding, dropping off the regional
list. That will tend to leave the top regional spot open for a candidate from a
smaller community.
How will regional MPs do their work? See how it works in Scotland.
Third, where exactly are those “disproportionately
represented rural areas?”
People sometimes think of rural areas within the larger provinces, which become
over-represented by the end of the ten-year cycle, due to urban growth. But of
course the new boundaries taking effect this year, based on the 2011 census, correct that problem. The only systematic
over-representation within a province is Northern Ontario’s two extra seats.
But 66% of Northern Ontario’s people are urban; no problem of disproportionately represented rural seats there.
Often, people are really talking about smaller provinces like
PEI.
If the smaller provinces were represented exactly by population,
Manitoba would have 12 MPs not 14, Saskatchewan would have 10 not 14, Nova
Scotia would have 9 not 11, New Brunswick would have 7 not 10, Newfoundland
& Labrador would have 5 not 7, and PEI would have 2 not 4. Those 2,357,325
people have 60 MPs, rather than 45: that’s 15 extra MPs.
First, only 4.4% of the 338 MPs are those 15 extra MPs for the smaller
provinces.
But look at the 5,835,270 Conservative voters. They would, on the votes
cast in 2011, elect 188 of those 338 MPs, rather than the 141 they deserve.
That’s 47 extra MPs by party, compared with 15 extra MPs by province.
Voting system disproportionalities are much bigger than provincial
disproportionalities.
Secondly, are those 15 extra MPs really more rural than MPs from the
larger provinces?
Manitoba’s 14 MPs are eight from Winnipeg, and one from
Brandon—Souris which is more than half urban. Saskatchewan’s 14 MPs are six
from Saskatoon or Regina, and a seventh from Prince Albert which is more than
half urban. (And the suburban Saskatoon riding is 45% urban too.) Total urban:
16 of 28.
In Atlantic Canada, four of Nova Scotia’s ridings are in
Halifax, and Sydney-Victoria is largely urban. In New Brunswick Moncton—Riverview—Dieppe, Saint John—Rothesay and
Fredericton are urban. In Newfoundland
& Labrador, both St. John’s ridings are urban, along with 54% of Avalon. In
PEI, Charlottetown is urban.
So 28 of those 60 MPs are urban: 47%. Therefore, those 15
extra MPs are seven urban, eight rural. Are rural areas disproportionately
represented? Hardly.
Conclusion: the “disproportionately represented rural
seats” are an urban myth, a distraction.
A Rural-Urban model
Go here to find out about the new Rural-Urban proportional model.
A Rural-Urban model
Go here to find out about the new Rural-Urban proportional model.
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