 Presinus
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Date sent: 2019/11/05 05:44:08
1. Theres several parties you may vote for, each has their own plans for what they wanna do to the country.
2. Canada is divided into political ridings, which can be changed whenever.
3. The party who gets the most votes in a single riding gets a seat.
4. If a party gets 170+ seats, they're a majority government, and do not need approval from other parties to make changes.
5. If a party gets 169- seats, they're a minority government, and must fight other seat holding parties. The more seats they hold, the more power they have in the debate.
Now let's say each riding had an equal ratio of people of each political standing (as the country). The conservative party would have every seat (despite Canadas prime minister being liberal rn), and literally no other party would have any power.
You can make life less favourable for people of certain political standings in some ridings, so you can encourage them to move to other ridings, where their vote may not matter, and the party they voted for is more or less likely to win a seat.
You can have the shape of each riding changed so people in a certain area whom are more likely to vote for the other guy will have less power in their vote.
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 Presinus
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Date sent: 2019/11/12 00:50:26
I'm German, Icelandic, English, Norwegian, Swedish, Russian, Scottish, (American) Irish, French, and Dutch living in Canada; a colony of England and America's closest ally. I am relevant everywhere |