On the eve of the 2025 federal election call, an excerpt from Danielle Smith’s interview with Breitbart News started making the rounds on social media. On Sunday it hit mainstream media.
In the interview, Smith said: “The longer this [tariff] dispute goes on, politicians posture, and it seems to be benefiting the Liberals right now so I would hope that we could put things on pause is what I’ve told administration officials… Let’s just put things on pause so we can get through an election.”
Why should the Trump administration care about the Canadian election? Smith went on to say that she told the Americans “I would say, on balance, the perspective that Pierre [Poilievre] would bring would be very much in sync with, I think… the new direction in America. And I think we’d have a really great relationship for the period of time they’re both in (office).”
All the more reason for proportional representation! So we can fire these extremists from office!
I agree with proportional representation, I think it’s imperative.
But, to be fair, with FPTP 1380 flipped votes would have kept her from power in the 2023 provincial election.
With straight PR it’d be like 100,000.
So, again, PR is critical for the overall health of a democracy. Especially in AB it would probably result in much greater turnout.
But, strictly speaking, FPTP is actually a thorn for this specific extremist.
I appreciate the point about the math in Smith’s specific case - you’re absolutely right that FPTP happened to work against her in 2023. That 1,380 vote margin is quite thin compared to what would be needed under PR.
But the issue with FPTP isn’t just about which specific politicians win or lose - it’s about systemic democratic legitimacy. Even when FPTP occasionally works against politicians we might consider extreme, it still creates a fundamentally unstable system where millions of valid votes are discarded and representation is distorted.
Under PR, extremist views don’t disappear, but they get precisely the representation they’ve earned - no more, no less. The larger benefit is that when voters are dissatisfied with any politician’s conduct (like soliciting foreign interference), they can be more effectively removed without strategic voting distortions.
What’s particularly troubling about our current system is how it creates perverse incentives that lead politicians to court narrow bases rather than broad consensus. PR would require building actual majorities through coalition and compromise, rather than exploiting FPTP’s mathematical quirks.
The principle remains: in a democracy, citizens deserve representation that accurately reflects their votes - regardless of which politicians might benefit in any specific election.
A point I don’t often see you make is that FPTP is actually a voter suppression mechanic.
You live in a riding with 65% support for Candidate A, but you support candidate B? When it’s all-or-nothing with a foregone conclusion why bother? But this skews the result: you didn’t bother to vote, so it gives the illusion Candidate A had higher support than they actually do. Maybe the 65% support wasn’t even accurate to begin with.
Maybe a better system gets 200,000 more voters into the booth, rather than praying that the winds of FPTP are in your favour.
I haven’t thought of it as voter suppression…
But it makes sense, however the connection isn’t strong. It’s hard enough as is to convince people millions of perfectly valid ballots are just discarded every single election.
I’ll keep it at the back of my mind.