RangerRay
Army.ca Veteran
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OTBthinker said:But let's remember that the purpose of incorporating PR into a mixed system is to enhance ideological representation; I don't care if the person representing me lives three hours away as long as I know the he is representing me ideologically. Under our present system, if the representative has ideological opinions different and perhaps even opposed to mind, he is not representing me even if he were my next door neighbour. And what of representatives elected with less than 50% of the vote in the riding; is that person truly representing the riding? No! To me, ideological representation is far more important than local representation, and that's why we need PR. Just ask yourself, what do most people vote for? Do they vote for the person, or do they vote for the political party that the person represents? If you're honest you'll agree that most people vote for the party and really don't care too much who the person is. People want ideological representation and that's why we need PR.
That's nice that you want someone to represent your ideology, but in my experience, most voters want their MP/MLA to be their local representative in Parliament. Most people couldn't give two figs for ideology, holding views that are often contradictory (myself included). They may vote for a party that reflects mostly what they agree with, but they want to send someone to Parliament who understands their local issues. I lived in a riding that had and MLA from party that was not traditionally elected in that riding. Because he effectively represented the riding in Parliament, rather than represented the party and its ideology, people voted for him despite coming from a party that they would not normally vote for.
All politics is local.
Because you want a representative that agrees with you ideologically does not mean most people do.
EDIT TO ADD: The Westminster system we have, and the representative system in the US, is based on electing local representatives, not ideological representatives. As Mr. Campbell says, to do what you say is to turn our system upside down.