lenaitch
Senior Member
No new province would be created. Instead the Ontario Provincial Parliament would be reconstituted along federal lines, with a new upper house comprised of representatives of the super-regions (who would vote en bloc). Jurisdiction would generally be concurrent with certain issues prevailing at one or the other level. Admittedly, this is more or less exactly the German federal system, but why not go with that?
Our Westminster bicameral system has two chambers considering the same pieces of legislation. Would this proposal have each chamber only considering legislation that affects its constituents/scope of authority, with the other chamber sitting on their hands? Would there be areas of common jurisdiction? This becomes very important for money bills and other matters of confidence. Could confidence be lost in one chamber but not the other? This sounds like a recipe for chaos and gridlock. Detractors - those opposed and possibly other provinces - might argue that this is creating a defacto province.
Practices in other federal-type systems don't always transfer.
Regardless, we are in the weeds. The topic is apparently off the table