I mean when was the last time a governing party actually received more than 50% of the vote at any given time?
Federally, Brian Mulroney, first term, just crested the 50% number.
Provincially, the last party to crest 50% was also the Conservatives, in 1929, Howard Feguson won with 58.8% of the vote.
Are you really stating that the last half-century of governments in this province have been electorally invalid?
Statutorily? No. Morally, yes. I've always felt that way, no matter who wins. I don't think the 'will of the people' is everything (that's why we have a Charter, so that the mob can't suppress individual rights on a whim.......
That said, the starting point of any democratic government must be to have the consent of the governed; by which we surely mean a majority. Any assertion to contrary renders democracy utterly without meaning.
Ultimately we as a collective society have over a long period of democratic elections and systems have agreed to operate under our democratic system and I don't see any significant dissent against that.
Three out of 4 main parties in the last Ontario election ran on a platform of electoral reform and won 59% of ballots cast. We can nitpick whether a majority is in favour of any particular model, you cannot say with a straight face that there isn't material opposition to the status quo.
And under that system, the PCs were properly elected with a strong majority government. We laugh at Republicans south of the border questioning election results (and rightfully so), but as soon as a conservative party wins here, it's ok to do the same?
No, I'm consistent, I oppose the current system when Liberals win and when Rae won for that matter, the rules should be consistent across all elections, but different rules than what we use today.
And that's for a party that won a strong plurality of votes, what is your opinion of the Federal liberals who are governing despite winning *less* votes than the federal Conservatives did (not questioning the vailidity of that election, the Liberals won fair and square under the electoral system we have collectively signed on to)?
The Liberals actually lack a majority in this parliament which I see as a positive, though I dislike their overall style of governing which is as if there were a majority. Again, I'm consistent I have always opposed FPTP no matter which party wins. I do not favour, indeed I completely and utterly oppose any party obtaining well less than 50% of the vote and then having 100% of the power.
Regarding the flipping of ridings, the PCs flipped three ridings in Brampton, directly beside the highway. The highway may or may not have factored into that, but it certainly doesn't appear to have hurt them. I struggle to say that the highway failed electoral support when the PCs swept the three regions this highway runs through and basically every riding within a 20km radius of it (with the exception of Humber-River Black Creek).
The highway did not poll as a deciding issue in any of those constituencies or in any other..........
That said, lets pretend otherwise for a moment:
55.2% of voters supported parties/candidates opposed to the highway
53.9% of voters supported candidates/parties opposed to the highway.
51.6% of voters supported parties/candidates opposed to the highway.
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The PCs/conservative-leaning parties did obtain a majority or near-majority of votes cast in Dufferin-Caledon and Wellington/Halton Hills.