ensign edwards, on 31 March 2011 - 12:08 AM, said:
Either way, the point remains we did it.
Yes, but my point was that I don't think you could claim apparently decisive action taken by your government in that case as a function of a governmental system that embraces small parties. Canada is a member of NATO, therefore it was basically an obligation of being part of the treaty organisation and there wasn't much need for a debate - had this have been like the US invasion of Iraq where there was considerable debate and a lack of wholehearted support across nations, then debate would have been protracted in Canada with so many parties and political interests involved. It was bad enough in the UK with a majority Labour government and the dissenters within it - and even then what was presented to the British public as a justification for that military action eventually didn't stand up to close scrutiny.
Quote
I tried to, but you refused to listen to the facts. There's not much point when you've already decided that things are a certain way and won't change your mind no matter what I say.
Because I think you have to say it stronger and better. I haven't made my mind up one way or another, but you have not persuaded me round to your way of thinking. There is a lack of hard fact being given by you and the examples you quoted in the past did not stand up when I did a little research of my own. To persuade me, I think you'd need to come up with a solid example of a situation of national importance in your country that A) was not impeded by having to pander to numerous self-interested parties and

that a fragmentary system worked as a positive advantage. If you can do that (and you know I'll check it out for myself!), then I'll accept what you say. Again, I think the biggest nullifier to your claim is the fact that other major western powers have not moved closer to your political system. On the world stage, I don't see anyone lauding or citing Canada as a paragon of democracy or efficient government, and as things stand in the UK where there are a number of politicians campaigning for electoral reform which might indeed benefit some smaller parties, still no one is pointing at Canada.
Quote
This is largely true, but my point has always been that a party doesn't necessarily need to form a ruling government to play in important role in parliament.
Government is about numbers. You have less elected people representing your concerns then you have less say - so playing an important part in government is always going to be relative here. If you're saying that
opinions expressed by minority parties might play an important part in ensuring a wide diversity of views are at least represented in Parliament then I would not disgree with that, but opinions do not alone force through legislation, because again, that is a numbers game which is why the UK Parliament employs party "Whips" to ensure that party members vote according to the party line on certain contentious issues. You can't pass a law without majority support either here or in the US which is why large political parties containing a membership who are ideologically aligned
on the most important issues such as the economy, foreign policy and defence are absolutely essential for swift and efficient legislative machinery, which is why the US mid-term elections play such an important role and why Obama's administration has been effectively emasculated because any law they try to pass gets cut off by the opposition reigning in the other house. If the US system was all about little parties then an affective opposition
that can prevent certain ideals held by the Government to become law would not be possible because politcal consensus would be harder to achieve - in many ways, the US system is admirable because both sides seem to hold their ideological ground and are generally consistent and predictable, and there isn't the ideological "slippage" that there has been in the UK where the left-wing Labour Party moved due to Blairite policies to be almost further Right than the Liberal Democrats in the supposed middle.