Tag Archives: federalist party

Revere the Leader

abortion-rights-trump-mps-freedom-to-vote-their-conscienceliberal-caucus-20140819Jus In the natural governing party you revere the Leader. The Liberals have learned nothing and its still the same old same old. But are any of the other parties any better?

12.3 Key resolutions need two third majorities to be passed in the National Assembly, National Congress, and the Federal council. Key resolutions are motioned in the National policy committee. These resolutions form the National Party Platform and are binding upon a Federalist government and all Federalist MPs. Each Federalist MP can vote as they choose in the House of Commons. They may vote against a key resolution without penalty a number of times in each Parliament equal to the number of times they have been elected to the Commons.

I have had this discussion before and what it comes down too is are you a Member of Parliament or are you a Member of Party? The answer is another more basic question the voters and taxpayers of Canada should ask. Who pays their salaries?

With the Federalist party of Canada what comes first is recognition that its the taxpayers who pay an MP’s salary and not the Party and certainly not the Party Leader. But they are also running as the Federalist’s candidate for the House so they are required to support the Party’s platform in Parliament. This support however is not and should not be the absolute that Mr. Trudue is dictating to the members of the Liberal party.

As the Federalist party’s constitution shows Federalist’s MPs can pass on a bloc vote of the caucus a limited number of times in each Parliament. Breaking party ranks beyond this brings the following penalties; first time 90 day suspension from caucus, second time 180 day suspension from caucus and National Congress, third time 1 year suspension of party membership, fourth time its bye bye you are in the wrong party!

Instead of Party discipline rigidity have a system that says you are both MP Member of Parliament and a Member of your Party. I repeat you are a Member of Parliament first why? Because where I come from the One that pays your salary is the one who gets to call the shots!

Barry Aulis

Senate Appointments

1024px-Flag_of_the_Governor-General_of_Canada.svgOld method by the Political Monarch (PM)

The Governor-General of Canada shall by custom and NEW precedence make appointments to the Senate of Canada upon the advice of the Senate Appointment Council. This council is the top two candidates in each riding in the last Federal or By-election for every riding.

Cons    NDP    Lib    Bloc    Green    Ind    Total                                     226      219     114       46          4           7        616                                        37%     36%     19%    7%       0.6%     1.1 %

In PEI the top 2 provincial candidates would be 50% Lib and 50% Cons. In Alberta Cons 49% / Wild Rose 42% / Liberal 5% / NDP 4%.

When a seat becomes vacant a qualified candidate is nominated by any two members from the same riding. All nominees are put to a Yes or No vote by secret ballot of the Appointment council. To be recommended for appointment takes a 2/3 majority vote of the council. If there is more then one candidate then the one with the most votes is the one appointed.

All Senators can not be members or contributors to political parties. The Senate should be able to send a bill back to the House of Commons with amendments by a majority vote. Then send it back a second time with objections by a 2/3 majority vote and if passed by the House of Commons a third time the Senate is to pass it and give it to the Governor-General for Royal Assent. Only the ability to delay, recommend, and object.

The composition of the Senate should be changed. Give 3 seats to all provinces plus the Natives and 1 seat to each territory. This gives you 36 seats from 12 “regions”. Distribute another 36 seats among these 12 regions on the basis of population. Half of the 72 Senate members is determined by population and the other half by equal regional representation. The result is Ontario 16 / Quebec 11 / BC 8 / Alberta 7 / PEI 3 / Each territory 1 / and all others NS, NB, SK, Man, Nfld, Natives will have 4 seats each.

Quebec election 2014

 

Party

Liberal

PQ

CAQ

QS

Other

Vote

42%

25%

23%

8%

2%

Seats

70

30

22

3

0

Dual seats

100

88

54

7

1 (ind)

Leg vote

45%

30%

22%

3%

<1%

 

Vote is the percentage of the popular vote each party received. Seats is members elected by our first past the post system. Dual seats is members elected under the Dual Electoral System which elects the top two candidates in each riding so is 250 members for the National Assembly’s 125 seats. Each member has 1 vote in legislative session of the National Assembly for each vote received in the election. By either a run off election or a preference ballot voters cast a vote for one of the two elected candidates so the votes cast for the defeated candidates will get transferred to one of the two elected candidates.

The legislative vote is calculated from all the votes received by the top two candidates in each riding and deciding where the defeated candidates votes will go. The Liberals had 5% popular vote to be transferred. I decided to award 75% to the CAQ and 25% to the PQ. The PQ had 4% to be transferred so I put it 75% CAQ and 25% QS. The CAQ had 9% to be transferred I gave 67% to the Liberals and 33% to the PQ. QS had 6% to be transferred I awarded 67% to the PQ and the remainder split between the Liberals and CAQ. Th remaining 2% I gave equally to the Liberals and PQ. This gives you a rough idea of the distribution of votes and yes I went through the results riding by riding.

If Quebec ever adopted the Dual Electoral System I would suggest a National Assembly of 100 members being the top two candidates elected from 50 ridings. The smallest riding having 50% or more of the eligible voters compared to the largest riding.

 

Quebec election

pmAnother election triggered by a wave of the hand of the political monarch (PM). If its good enough for the National Assembly to pass legislation setting municipal elections to a fixed 4 year term on a set date then why is the same not good enough for the Quebec government?

Set Quebec elections for a set date every 4 years. Separate the vote for the executive and legislature. The Quebec voters directly vote for who they have confidence in to be the government in the next parliament. The top 4 councils nominated by the National Assembly are on the ballot in an executive vote the same as voting for a mayor in local elections. No more then 6 candidates for the National Assembly in a legislative election. No more confidence motions they are replaced by a motion of dismissal that can dismiss a minister by a two thirds majority vote of the National Assembly with the premier dismissed by an absolute two thirds majority (84). These means getting rid of the Westminster style of government and replacing it with the provincial version of our municipal governments. This is 21st century Quebec not 19th century Britain.

Crown Senate

senateWhat to do with the Senate of Canada? I should email this to all the former Liberal Senators but they are still Senators and they are still members of the Liberal party so whats actually changed? From The Fed the party’s wiki.

Parliament policy / Binding resolution

Title: Crown Senate

 Introduction

The current patronage Senate is to be abolished. The Parliament of Canada in law will establish two advisory bodies to replace it. The Federal senate will replace the current Senate in its capacity of representation by province. The Federal senate will be what is called the triple E Senate namely equal, elected, and effective. The Crown senate will replace the current Senate in its capacity as a chamber of sober second thought. The Crown senate will be non-partisan and not made by patronage appointment. The cost of running the current Senate will go to the advisory councils with each getting 50% of the funds. The salaries of the current senators will likewise go to the members of the advisory councils with each Council getting 50% to be paid equally to each member of that Council.

Be it resolved

It is the national policy of the Federalist Party that a Federalist government shall introduce into Parliament the following.

The Crown senate will advise the Governor General on Royal assent. The Governor General on the advice of the Crown senate can send a bill back to the House of Commons with or without recommendation. This is done by a majority vote of the Crown senate. If the House of Commons passes the bill a second time the Governor General on the advice of the Crown senate can send the bill back to the House of Commons with objections. This is done by a two-thirds majority vote of the Crown senate. If the House of Commons passes the bill a third time the Governor General shall give it Royal assent. The Crown senate can only delay legislation for a limited period of time. It can recommend and object but cannot defeat legislation passed by the elected chambers of Parliament. All crown senators cannot be members, donate, or participate in the activities of any political party.

The Crown senate will have 72 members. Half will be split among the provinces equally with the other half being distributed on the basis of population. Each province will get 3 seats, the three northern territories will get one Senator each, and three seats will be reserved for native Canadians for a total of 36 seats. Population distributes the other 36 seats. The 72 seats are allotted as follows British Columbia 8 seats, Alberta 7, Saskatchewan 4, Manitoba 4, Ontario 16, Québec 12, New Brunswick 4, Nova Scotia 4, Newfoundland 4, Prince Edward Island 3, the northern territories 3, and native Canadians 3. The electors for the Crown Senate are the top two candidates in each riding for the House of Commons. This gives you 616 electors. The membership of the current electors is 38% conservative, 36% NDP, 18% liberal, 7% Bloc, and 1% all others. When a seat goes vacant in a province than any elector from that province may nominate a candidate for that seat. When a seat goes vacant in the northern territories then any elector from any territory may nominate a candidate for that seat. When a seat goes vacant for native Canadians any elector may nominate a candidate. The electors by secret ballot vote yes or no for each candidate with the candidate with the most votes being elected. It shall take a two-thirds majority vote to elect a member of the Crown senate. They shall have a term of 24 years with 3 seats going up for election each year. Crown senators may serve only one term with the exception of a vacancy where the Senator appointed serves out that term and may be appointed to a full term.

Be it further resolved

If there is a Federal senate then by secret ballot the Federal senate in regular session that is one vote per Senator shall confirm by a two-thirds majority vote.

Summary

These two advisory councils are Try it before You buy it. You see how they would actually work as a part of Parliament before making a decision to amend the constitution of Canada. I would have a vote by Canadians in the 43rd federal election that being around 2019 on whether to have a Crown senate and in the 44th federal election around 2023 on whether to have a Federal senate.

Barry Aulis compton-stanstead / QC

barry@barryaulis.ca

Vote                                                                                                                                                                                                                                            The Founder authorized this national policy resolution with no votes in the National assembly, Congress, and Federal council.

 

This binding policy resolution shall apply only for the 41st Parliament.