recceguy said:
So, for all those standing up for Mr Sutherland, et al.
Are you also standing up for all the folks from the Middle East, or wherever, that come here, get a passport of convenience and then return home to their businesses(Lebanon in example) until they need medical help or they are being overrun by terrorists and we have to evacuate them all back to Canada? They should get to vote also, right?
I don't see a difference, so feel free to enlighten us
I'll bite.
Mr Sutherland only has Canadian citizenship, as per the article he could get Dual, but chose to keep just a singular Canadian passport. Which speaks volume in my opinion. Should people with dual Citizenship get to vote? Interesting point/question, but what if they have dual British/Canadian or Australian/Canadian?
You make a point about how these people are essentially "gaming the system" and more or less don't care about Canada until they need help. Should they be able to vote? I have a question, what benefit do they get from voting? As a another poster stated Canada has voting based on ridings. if the candidate you voted for doesn't get in your vote doesn't really count for anything. Why would anyone who doesn't give a damn about Canada bother to vote by proxy in an election that likely isn't even being covered in the country that they presently reside in. I assume (correct me if I am wrong) that it isn't the easiest thing to vote by proxy when you live in different country let alone continent. It was hard enough for me to vote in the riding I "lived in" while I was attending university as the only thing with my new address on it was a rental agreement for the residence room which I was staying in (which I had to get from housing services) as the utilities were handled by the University. I'm going to be running into a similar problem when I start school again in the Fall as I'm going to attend school in a different Province and will again be living in residence.
As per the original article
"Although the legislation technically applies to more than one million expats, records show only about 6,000 of them actually voted in the 2011 election."
6000/1 000 000 = 0.6%
So of the expats eligible to vote, only 0.6% of the expats did. i'd say it is safe to assume that of the expats that voted the majority were "engaged" and actually cared about the results. I'd also imagine that those who did vote were more engaged than the general public.
Even if none of the expats who voted were "engaged" 6000 divided by 300 or so ridings, this averages to 200 votes a riding when you factor in 4 parties that averages to 50 votes / party. Even if these voters were all disengaged with ulterior motives I'd say it is safe to say the 2011 election was not won by renegade expat votes.
If we want to talk about disengaged voters what about young adults? Back when i was 18 all of my friends all voted for a the opposing party just so they could text me after and say "just voted for XXXX You mad?". My brother voted for the Family Christian Coalition Party because he thought it was "funny". I can guarantee some of sisters high-school peers voted for the local Independent candidate after he "Lit up" the other candidates at the High-School "All Candidates Debate" but other than that said individual didn't really have plan. What about me? When I first moved to were I currently reside there was an election only a month after I arrived, i was now considered to be "engaged" enough to vote there as were the other few thousand students who moved in a few weeks prior. Similarly the exact same thing will be happening to me again this October when I move yet again to begin more schooling, this time in different province. As will many other students who in just a few short weeks will begin their post secondary studies. What about the students who have been in University for two years now and have moved so far away they are only able to come home at Christmas? Are they really engaged with what is happening in their local riding? What about young adults who have/will turn 18 this year? Do they really know what is going on? (Not to pick on young voters as this is my age demographic, however I figured I should include a few examples....)
i also went to High School with a girl who graduated with multiple full ride scholarships to Universities in the states for Women's Golf. Why would she turn that down? I haven't talked to her in a few years now, but this Election I imagine she will not be able to vote.. Is that really fair? She also wouldn't have voted in the previous federal election because she wasn't old to enough to do so...
Take a look at my grand father's employment history.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Champ
I'm not exactly sure what year he moved back to USA but for as long as I remember he lived in the states. He is dead now, but when he died the funeral was at the Canadian Embassy in Washington D.C. (By the way he didn't return home to Canada for his Cancer Treatments either :
). He had a room in his house which was known as the "Canada Room" which had a bunch of memorabilia from Canada, Pretty neat guy all around and I wish I would of gotten to know him better.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/journalist-henry-champ-dies-at-75-1.1161865
"Despite all of his sophistication, he was a home-grown farm guy who loved Manitoba, loved rural communities and loved the university he had attended," Brandon University president Deborah Poff told CBC News.
I'm not sure if he voted in the 2011 election but I wouldn't be surprised at all if he did.
Edit:
Spelling/Grammar