Thank you, Madam Chair.
I'm really more engaging in a discussion with Mr. Maloney than I am asking Mr. Mayrand a question, because I don't think it's fair to ask policy questions of someone whose role is to interpret rather than to offer policy opinions.
Just with regard to the single transferrable vote system and its relative merits or demerits vis-à-vis the first-past-the-post system that we use for members of the House of Commons, the obvious advantage of it is in proportionality. There's some level of proportionality when you've got more than one candidate running and, to some degree, the preferential vote allows you to avoid strategic voting.
If one imagines, as your first choice, you are a supporter of, let's say, the New Democratic candidate and you vote for the Liberal because you think he's got a better chance of defeating the Conservative, who you don't want, that's the kind of thing that occurs in a first-past-the-post election. There's no danger of that under a preferential system, where you can indicate your preference for your first choice. If that person dropped off the list, your second choice then comes into effect. That's a significant advantage.
The other thing I wanted to point to is multi-member elections in the closest parallel that exists, which is the Australian Senate. They use an STV system. They used to use a kind of first-past-the-post system, with multiple members elected at the same time. What happened was you'd get a situation where perhaps in an Australian state, 55% of the vote would be cast for Party A, 45% for Party B, but Party A would win 100% of the slate from that state. They had to actually alter that system. So I think that's the kind of problem that can exist with a first-past-the-post system for a chamber like the Canadian Senate.
Thank you.