Pr. Jae said:
revsdd - any time you vote you're voting against something.
How do you figure?
On a ballot you are asked to vote for and individual.
Every mark on every ballot is counted as an affirmation of the individual for a particular position.
If we mark all names but one we have spoiled our ballot because the ballot never asks who are we voting against.
A vote for candidate X is a vote for candidate X and nothing more.
If candidate X wins their seat and candidate X represents party Y then Party Y has won a seat.
Names not present on ballots in the riding of Brant include Gilles Duceppe, Stephen Harper, Elizabeth May, Tom Mulcair or Justin Trudeau. Nobody in Brantford will vote for either one of them. We will never be given a chance to vote for anyone of them unless they choose to represent our riding.
We won't get to vote Bloc ever I imagine so we can vote for a representative from the Conservative Party, Green Party, New Democrats Party or the Liberal Party. We can also choose from a Libertarian, and an Independent.
When I cast my vote Friday past I chose one. I n so doing I did not chose to vote against several I simply did not choose several to vote for.
The parties will spin it and say I voted for their leader they will never likely actually ask me to affirm that belief of theirs.
Those keen on proportional representation will say (possibly) that if the candidate of my choice is ultimately defeated that my voice has not been heard. Which is baloney because it will be counted.
I cannot say my vote was wasted because at the end of the day I will have a member of Parliament to represent me in Ottawa. It doesn't matter much if it is not the one I wanted.
And none of those candidates will know unless I decide to make it a matter of public record. From comments I've made hear there will likely be no surprises in figuring out whom I did not cast my ballot for. So by process of elimination that cuts a field of six down to a field of three.