this post was submitted on 24 Feb 2025
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[–] [email protected] 10 points 3 days ago (2 children)

I think your opinion is heavily influenced by American politics and doesn't align with how parliamentary democracies work.

If Parliament is "we the people" and they vote to make decisions on every aspect of governance as your representative, how come them electing the Prime Minister is so offensive to you?

You shouldn't even really be voting purely along party lines, you elect your local representative and they represent you. You should evaluate them on their own merits. They often vote along party lines, but even if "your party" wins your local election or even the most seats that doesn't mean they get to form government without the support of a majority of Parliament. It's always been this way, at no point do you ever make a direct decision on who leads.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 3 days ago (1 children)

1 day old account, look at the post history. I doubt that person is even Canadian.

[–] marathon -4 points 3 days ago (3 children)

If Parliament is “we the people” and they vote to make decisions on every aspect of governance as your representative, how come them electing the Prime Minister is so offensive to you?

You're not paying attention. Where did I say that parliament electing the PM is offensive to me? What I am saying that the PM being appointed by non-elected members of the LPC is offensive to me. It's not parliament doing it, but the Liberal Party of Canada members voting for their next leader of the party, which is then automatically the PM. Helluva difference.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 days ago

How could Trudeau have handled his resignation in a way that would have been acceptable to you? The party leader serves an important function for the election process, and people would rightfully complain if he ran in the election with the intent to step down.

He could have privately held successor conversations behind closed doors and announced that someone else would take over for him during the election, but that wouldn't be inclusive of the opinions of Liberal voters and people would complain.

He could have immediately stepped down and called an election and the Liberals could have run without a leader. That would be unacceptable to all Liberal voters and many others and would be a stupid move.

When you have a system where the party or coalition with the most seats in Parliament elects the Prime Minister, I don't see what options you have that would satisfy bad faith arguments like yours.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 3 days ago

I didn't vote for PP to be the leader of the conservative party, does that mean that if he is the new pm that he is also unelected?

Party members vote for the party leader. If that party is leading the govt then they are the leader of the country. It is how parliamentary systems work.