Skip to content

Editor, The Times:

Time to change the current voting system
12463103_web1_LetterPen

Canada Day is a good day to reflect on what it is to be Canadian.

For me being Canadian means being part of a diverse society of people, languages and of course, food.

We share a love of nature, and are proud of our universal health care.

We pride ourselves on being tolerant and respectful of each other, in spite of our differences, be they our economic status, ethnicity, or our sexual and/or political choices.

Sure, we may grumble about each other, but for the most part, we work together, we live in the same neighbourhoods, and we get along.

That’s a good thing, because respect and tolerance are important to a civil society.

But as we all know, the political world is becoming a scary place.

To the south of us, Trump’s actions horrify many of us.

In Ontario, Doug Ford, a virtual political novice, is in charge of Canada’s biggest economy.

Perhaps, even worse, their divisive, highly inflammatory rhetoric is hurting us.

Instead of uniting us, it’s dividing us and poisoning our society at large.

That’s why I think we need proportional representation.

Under a proportional voting system, Ford would have 40 per cent of the power, not all of it, and Trump wouldn’t be the president.

Under a proportional voting system, politicians from across the spectrum would have to work together for the greater good.

First Past the Post has served us, but it’s time for a change.

It’s time for proportional representation.

Ann Remnant

Nelson, BC



newsroom@clearwatertimes.com

Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter