Bloc Québécois voter’s mail-in ballot was returned to sender after the election
Elections Canada said the return address printed on this elector’s return envelope was incorrect — specifically, part of the postal code.

Courts could force byelection, expert says
But Ara Karaboghossian, professor of political science at Vanier College, says there’s a chance this saga isn’t over. He said the election could be contested through Elections Canada’s contested elections process. He said irregularities can be the basis for contesting a decision
“It says that if there is any type of irregularity that has an effect on the result, then the person can actually contest,” said Karaboghossian. “The elector can contest. A candidate can contest. It’s open to anybody.”
The case will hinge on what an irregularity is, but it seems to Karaboghossian that a misprint on a self-addressed, stamped envelope could fall into that category.

Good news for Bloc Québécois

  • Cyborganism@lemmy.ca
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    19 hours ago

    A single vote does “matter” and should “matter” in a case like this where we’re split equally between two candidates. The last vote to make/break a tie is very important.

    • Evkob (they/them)@lemmy.ca
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      18 hours ago

      That’s well and true, but I think what the person you replied to is getting at is that the representation of an entire riding should not hinge on a single vote. Whether Terrebonne ends up Liberal or BQ, the entire representation of the riding hinging on a few votes is ridiculous, and proportional representation would avoid these issues.

        • snoons@lemmy.ca
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          15 hours ago

          In this case there would never be “won by a single vote” because any party that gets a minimum percentage of the vote already has a seat. More importantly, the people that voted for the “losing party” would have better representation as more of the vote would go to smaller parties (that better represent the minority of people) thereby making the house of commons a better representation of Canada. In contrast FPTP means any party that get’s >50% of the votes has most of the power which means anyone that didn’t vote for them is essentially left without a voice in the HoC, or at least a greatly diminished voice.

          Personally I just really hate seeing policy whiplash with liberal and conservative PMs undoing each others bills when one or the other is elected (especially on a provincial level). 🤦

          …this is also not to mention PR would likely increase voter turnout by a lot.

          https://www.fairvote.ca/what-is-proportional-representation/

          • Cyborganism@lemmy.ca
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            11 hours ago

            Aaaah OK. So as soon as a candidate gets X number of votes, they have s seat? So in a riding, there could be more than one MP?