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Craig's Take: The meaning of incumbent wins

Craig Oliver
Craig Oliver

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Date: Friday Oct. 7, 2011 1:26 PM ET

On Question Period this Sunday, we will be exploring some of the themes which tied together five elections in Canada during the last five months.

In all of these cases, incumbent governments have been returned.

I believe Canadians have been voting for safety and stability in the face of what Prime Minister Stephen Harper himself called "perilous threats to the global economy."

Although in some cases opposition parties have broadened their support and one increased their seat totals, voters have given government a mandate and cast their ballots against change.

There is another theme which appears to put a lie to what for a while became the oft-repeated anthem of the right, which was that the political centre in Canada is now dominated by conservative values.

In other words, the belief is that the dominant feature of political life in Canada has seen the right-of-centre become the new majority.

However, in three provinces last week (Ontario, Manitoba and PEI) moderate progressive governments were re-elected.

For conservatives, the biggest shocker of all may have been in Alberta where the new premier, Alison Redford, befitting her name, is considered a red Tory by her critics.

Poor voter turnout

There is another phenomenon in all of these elections which should give us pause for thought, and it is abysmally low voter turnout.

Barely less than 50 per cent of eligible voters in Ontario on Thursday cast a ballot, and in the federal election last May, voter turnout wasn't much better at around 61 per cent.

Why can't we not make it easier to vote?

On Wednesday, one of the globe's great innovators and high-tech geniuses, Steve Jobs, died.

He had made possible something I could never have imagined that any two people in the globe could chat, and do so at any time wherever they were on the surface of the earth, easily with audio, video, print or both.

So why is it not possible for us to vote using the same technology? There must be ways of adequately protecting privacy and security if only our antiquated political system could set aside rigid 19th century voting patterns and adapt to the new realities.

Election night in Canada would then be social networking writ large.

Those are some of the ideas we'll discuss with our always well-informed panels of politicos and others this Sunday.

- Craig Oliver

Comments are now closed for this story

mobile
said

I don't believe that online voting would have made a lot of difference to the turnout in Ontario.Maybe a box on the ballot that says "none of the above" would help. Maybe force them all to go back and get quality leaders and platforms. The choice in this election was simply appalling. I couldn't bring myself to vote for any of them. Rare for someone who believes we have a duty to do so. I was by no means alone in that sentiment.


Patrick (Vaughan)
said

Noone wants to take away the current system of pencil and paper because we know it works. Adding Internet voting to our democratic process is not change, it is development. Call-in based voting is also brought up around discussions where Internet voting is yet I've seen little dialogue about it from the media or public. It's largely a matter of participation. How many Canadians use social media? How many Canadian use phones? If nothing else should we not try? The alternative is sitting back and letting particpation in our democratic process wither. Its disquieting that there are so many people that take the immediate position that it wont work despite the evidence from the previous trial applications that it does increase turnout. (See Elections Canada Website Internet Voting Workshop)


Jen
said

Yes PLEASE...! Persons with disabilities and are homebound deserve to exercise their right to vote...!!!


Kyle
said

It has nothing to do with the current voting system. Opening it online would subject the system to massive fraud. It cannot be monitored if it's online.


Christopher
said

it would be a very simple to secure both privacy & ensure no *cheating* on-line voting. Use our SIN , and/or a personally asssigned *voting* number. I cannot *vote*more than once in CTV`s opinion polls, so what`s the problem? There are NONE!


Frank Buchan
said

Apathy is the cause of the voter turnout, not an absence of ease. We are surrounded by politicians who are so disconnected from average folks, they can't fathom it, but ask anyone at a Tim Horton's why voting is down and you'll get a solid fill of the truth: almost none of these candidates are worth voting for. All the technology in the world will never change the lack of quality, the lack of ideas, and the lack of engagement.As for the idea Canadians are voting against change, you would have to have a party offering actual managed change before you could judge that. What we have are various themes around the idea that taxation is inevitable at current or greater levels, services marked as entitlements can not really be fundamentally reassessed, and we must somehow be part of a badly skewed global system that has no interest in betterment of the local populace. Put a candidate and party in play who doesn't see those as inevitable or sacred, and is willing to reshape the future to ensure our best options, and Canadians might surprise the world. Right now though, we're locked in a diminishing returns dilemma.


Abby Wayne
said

No. Marking an X with a pencil is pretty simple stuff and pretty fraud proof. Why must we change for change sake? If people cannot get out to a polling station or won't get out to vote it's not the system's fault, it's something in them.


Bob H fr Petawawa
said

Technology as it is. This is a good point, one that should be looked at seriously lloked at.


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