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Electoral Reform committee  No, I think that covers it.

August 23rd, 2016Committee meeting

Prof. Matthew P. Harrington

Electoral Reform committee  I think you're correct in suggesting that people vote for all kinds of reasons. Again, when I look at, for example, the European Union referendum in Britain, we don't propose to the public the exact process. It is, “Do you want in or do you want out?”, and we leave Parliament to

August 23rd, 2016Committee meeting

Prof. Matthew P. Harrington

Electoral Reform committee  I'm talking about over the course of a hundred or two hundred years; it's a relatively new phenomenon.

August 23rd, 2016Committee meeting

Prof. Matthew P. Harrington

Electoral Reform committee  That's an entirely different problem, because we're talking about something entirely different, which is the dissolution of the confederation or a partial dissolution of the confederation.

August 23rd, 2016Committee meeting

Prof. Matthew P. Harrington

Electoral Reform committee  Again, I would shy away from referenda except in a situation in which one is looking for just a basic understanding of where people might be on a subject, but not with respect to the designing of policy. In this particular case, I am very much convinced that if we are not going t

August 23rd, 2016Committee meeting

Prof. Matthew P. Harrington

Electoral Reform committee  I think referenda are blunt instruments for making complex policy decisions. I think they are useful for giving Parliament a sense of where people are on a thing. In other words, it's hard for me to imagine what a referendum.... Obviously one can't put a referendum to a large gro

August 23rd, 2016Committee meeting

Prof. Matthew P. Harrington

Electoral Reform committee  I would suggest that Parliament have a great deal of leeway in the organization of ridings. I think the court seems to be rather deferential to that and regards it as a housekeeping issue. With ridings, and with the number of members of Parliament, I think the court seems to have

August 23rd, 2016Committee meeting

Prof. Matthew P. Harrington

Electoral Reform committee  I agree completely. I think that the Senate does not necessarily suffer from structural problems. The problems of the Senate can be solved by appointing better senators. The fact that the Senate is not elected is a puzzling objection to me, since the Supreme Court itself is not e

August 23rd, 2016Committee meeting

Prof. Matthew P. Harrington

Electoral Reform committee  I agree. I think simplicity...and the other aspect of that is accountability. When I vote, at the end of the night I can look and I can see who won. I think a system that gets overly complicated raises suspicions that the computer is doing these things, but when we have a governm

August 23rd, 2016Committee meeting

Prof. Matthew P. Harrington

Electoral Reform committee  My hate mail on that is spectacular.

August 23rd, 2016Committee meeting

Prof. Matthew P. Harrington

Electoral Reform committee  My fallback is a referendum. I think there has to be some mode by which there is a formal consultation with the people. I was reacting, at the time, to the assertion that there would be neither; there would be neither election nor referendum, in which case, as I have said, that i

August 23rd, 2016Committee meeting

Prof. Matthew P. Harrington

August 23rd, 2016Committee meeting

Prof. Matthew P. Harrington

Electoral Reform committee  Yes. Admittedly I take a rather High Church view of Parliament and its role in the system. I think that the most appropriate way for this matter to be resolved is for this to be the subject of an electoral campaign, which, of course, means that it's likely 2019. I know promises o

August 23rd, 2016Committee meeting

Prof. Matthew P. Harrington

Electoral Reform committee  I would agree with you. I think this is an area where Parliament ought to assert its sovereignty and not defer to the court.

August 23rd, 2016Committee meeting

Prof. Matthew P. Harrington

Electoral Reform committee  Yes, I think I'm in the minority on this. I do recognize that a number of my colleagues suggest that this is a section 44 problem. I will say this. First, no matter what Parliament comes up with, this will be litigated, sadly. Second, the court has not given any guidance. I see

August 23rd, 2016Committee meeting

Prof. Matthew P. Harrington