Canada/Elections
Canada has three kinds of elections:
- National (federal) elections
- Many parties share the same name as provincial parties, but must remain separate.
- Provincial and territory elections
- Many parties share the same name as national parties, but must remain separate.
- For example, the Green Party Of Canada must be completely independent of the Green Party Of Ontario
- Many parties share the same name as national parties, but must remain separate.
- Municipal and county elections
- Candidates run independently without official political party affiliation.
See also:
Contents
Party monopolies
Canadian politics are corrupt in countless ways, and are dominated a handful of national and provincial major parties. Each party has their own rigged system and constitution that limits party members from challenging the status quo, if not willing, forcing them, to be puppets that neither represent nor serve those who elected them.[citation needed]
- Bloc Québécois
- Conservative Party of Canada
- Green Party of Canada
- Liberal Party of Canada
- New Democratic Party
Hope against tyranny
Independent candidates
Independent candidates have a slim chance to break through the party monopoly, but there is a chance. If and when an independent candidate is elected they may have the ability to investigate and expose systemic corruption.[citation needed]
Better parties
Examples of better political parties:
Direct Democracy Party
The Direct Democracy Party...
See also:
- https://DirectDemocracyParty.net
- https://www.Facebook.com/DirectDemocracyPartyOfCanada/posts/d41d8cd9/2862067097158922/
- Not on Wikipedia yet.
- https://en.Wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_democracy
New Blue Party
See also:
None Of The Above Party
None Of The Above Party, also known as NOTA, is a direct democracy party, and the Canadian None Of The Above Party has joined the Direct Democracy Party, and perhaps the Ontario NOTA Party will form and join an Ontario Direct Democracy Party. When founding the party they were not allowed to use "Direct Democracy Party" allegedly because it was confusingly too similar to the New Democratic Party.Template:Citations needed
See also:
- http://NOTA.ca
- https://NOTAP.org
- https://en.Wikipedia.org/wiki/None_of_the_Above_Direct_Democracy_Party
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/None_of_the_above
- https://en.Wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_democracy
Pirate Party of Canada
Pirate Party...
See also:
References
External links
Wikipedia lists
- List of political parties in Canada
- List of federal political parties in Canada
- List of political parties in Alberta
- List of political parties in British Columbia
- List of political parties in Manitoba
- List of political parties in New Brunswick
- List of political parties in Newfoundland and Labrador
- List of political parties in Nova Scotia
- List of political parties in Ontario
- List of political parties in Prince Edward Island
- List of political parties in Quebec
- List of political parties in Saskatchewan
- List of political parties in Yukon
- Northwest Territories elects independent candidates and operates by consensus government.
- Nunavut, the territory, established in 1999, has a legislature that runs on a consensus government model, candidates running as independents, and no parties are represented in the Legislative Assembly.