Wednesday, 5 August 2015

Canada election 2015 — a guide to the parties, polls and electoral system

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CANADA heads to the polls on Oct 19 to elect members to the 42nd Canadian parliament.



At 78 days, it will be the longest campaign since 1872. Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper will attempt to become the first prime minister since 1908 to win four consecutive elections.

The voting system

The next Canadian parliament will be composed of 338 seats (expanded from the current 308) following the results of the latest census. The number of districts is reviewed every 10 years.

Members of parliament are elected through a first-past-the-post system — the candidate that comes first in each electoral district, called a riding, wins that seat.

The 338 ridings are distributed among Canada’s 10 provinces and three territories according to the country’s population.

Canada has elected 11 minority governments in its history, and there have also been two minority administrations after governments were replaced during elections.

Turnout has dropped to below 70pc in more recent votes.

Canada’s parliament has an upper and a lower house. Although legislation needs to pass through both houses, and can originate in both houses, the House of Commons is by far the dominant chamber. The Senate rarely rejects bills, and the government only needs to retain the confidence of the lower house.

The Senate consists of 105 members appointed by the governor general on the advice of the prime minister. Senate seats are assigned on a regional basis.

The political parties

Conservative Party of Canada: Centre-right party led by Prime Minister Stephen Harper has led the Canadian government since 2006.

Liberal Party of Canada: Centre-left party led by Justin Trudeau, son of former prime minister Pierre. The Liberals became known as Canada’s “natural governing party”, holding power for nearly 70 years in the 20th century, more than any other party in a developed and democratic country.

However, support for the party has declined over the past decade. Its result in the previous election in 2011 was its worst ever — and the first time the Liberals came in third.

The Conservatives (under the party’s different historic guises and names) and the Liberals have dominated Canadian politics and are the only two parties to have formed a government.

New Democratic Party (NDP): A social-democratic party to the left of the Liberals. Its leader is Thomas Mulcair. The party was founded in 1961, and in the 2011 election it became the official opposition for the first time in its history. Earlier this year the NDP won a surprise majority in Alberta and the party has surged in federal polls since.

Bloc Quebecois: A party focused on promoting Quebec’s interests and sovereignty in the Commons. In the Quebec election of 2014, the Bloc suffered its worst ever defeat after the party, which was in government at the time, called a snap election on the back of strong polls that projected a possible majority. Instead, the Liberals won a majority and Premier Pauline Marois lost her own riding.

The Green Party: Led by Elizabeth May, who in 2011 became the first elected Green MP in the party’s history.

Strength in Democracy: A new party founded in 2014. It currently has two MPs following defections from the Bloc and from an NDP member (also from Quebec).

The 2011 result

In May 2011, the Conservatives won an outright majority following two minority administrations (in 2006 and 2008).

According to Inter-Parliamentary Union data, only 25 per cent of Canada’s MPs are women — which is higher than the proportion in the US (20 per cent).

Turnout was 61.1 per cent.

What do the polls say?

Support for the Conservatives has trended upwards lately and Harper’s party is now virtually tied with the NDP. Meanwhile the Liberals continue to lag in third place.

However, because of Canada’s voting system, it’s all about the contest in each individual riding.

And with the risk of the vote on the left splitting, this will favour the Tories.

A minority Conservative or NDP government appears to be the most likely outcome, though a Liberal-NDP coalition shouldn’t be ruled out.

A note of caution — the polling looks quite similar to May’s UK election, which saw surveys expecting a neck-and-neck race between the Conservatives and the Labour party. In the event, the Tories won a small majority.

The UK, in fact, has a similar voting system to Canada’s, and a long campaign could favour the better-resourced Tories.

The first of the leaders’ debates is expected to take place in August.

On election day, polls are open for 12 hours across the country. The voting hours are staggered across the country’s different time zones so that the majority of results are available at approximately the same time on election night. Polls in the eastern provinces close at 9:30pm.
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24 dead after two trains derail in India

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NEW DELHI: Twenty four people have been killed after two packed trains derailed while crossing a bridge hit by floods in central India overnight Wednesday, authorities said, highlighting again safety problems with India’s crumbling railway network.



At least 24 bodies have been recovered so far and one person was seriously injured, said Bijendra Kumar, a railway official in Bhopal, the main city in Madhya Pradesh state.

Junior Home Minister Kiren Rijiju said more than 300 people have been rescued.

Rescuers had been searching in darkness for passengers feared trapped on the trains that were travelling in opposite directions when some of their carriages derailed in Madhya Pradesh state, officials said.

West Central Railway spokesman Piyush Mathur said the trains derailed within minutes of each other near the town of Harda at about 11:30 pm on Tuesday.

One of the trains travelling from the financial city of Mumbai appeared to have been hit by a sudden surge of water on the swollen Machak river, derailing the last four to five carriages, railway ministry spokesman Anil Saxena said.

The other passenger train, travelling to Mumbai from the eastern city of Patna, was also hit by water, with the engine and the first two to three carriages derailing, he said.

"There is some suggestion of flash floods on the tracks that caved the tracks. Most of the coaches had passed but the last few carriages were derailed," Saxena told the network of the first train.

Monsoon rains have hit large swathes of the country in recent weeks, flooding rivers and roads and claiming some 180 lives in mainly western and eastern India.

Read more: At least 180 dead, a million displaced in India floods

Police and doctors have been deployed to the accident site, with television footage showing medical supplies being piled on a nearby station platform and rescuers combing through tilted carriages.

But rescuers said operations were hampered by flooding in the area and officers had to work through the night mostly in darkness.

"The entire area has been reeling under heavy rainfall for the last few days. The roads are badly damaged, even the access road," Saxena said.

"Rushing emergency medical and other relief personnel to spot, darkness, water creating hurdles but ordered all possible help. Trying our best," Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu had said on Twitter.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi tweeted: "The two train accidents in Madhya Pradesh are deeply distressing. Deeply pained over the loss of lives."

India's railway network, one of the world's largest, is still the main form of long-distance travel in the vast country, but it is poorly funded and deadly accidents are frequent.

In 2012, a government report said almost 15,000 people were killed every year on India's railways, describing the deaths as an annual "massacre" due mainly to poor safety standards.

India's government has pledged to invest $137 billion to modernise its crumbling railways, making them safer, faster and more efficient.
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Military courts get Supreme Court nod

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ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court (SC) on Wednesday in a majority ruling upheld the establishment of military courts in Pakistan.



Petitions challenging the 21st amendment were dismissed in a majority 11-6 vote of the 17-member SC bench. Chief Justice Nasirul Mulk and Justice Dost Muhammad announced the verdict.

In a 14-3 majority vote, petitions challenging the 18th amendment were also dismissed by the bench. Judges provided seven opinions and two additional notes on the ruling.

The judgement was to be announced by the full court bench headed by Chief Justice Nasirul Mulk in Courtroom No 1 of the SC building. The SC office had issued a supplementary cause list heralding the announcement of the judgement.

"Disappointing verdict"
Former Supreme Court Bar Association President Kamran Murtaza said "It's a very disappointing verdict by the apex court. The court just upheld the doctrine of necessity. We are going to file a review petition against this judgement."

Kamran Murtaza and Asma Jehangir had earlier this year petitioned against the establishment of military courts on behalf of the SCBA.

"Success for the nation"
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's Special Assistant for Law Ashtar Ausaf Ali called the decision "another strike against terror", adding, "it's a success for the nation."

He said that the apex court stated that amendments which can change the country for the better can be made to the Constitution and added that military courts have been set up in order to "crush terrorists".

Ausaf said that within the next two years of operation of military courts, remaining institutions will be strengthened. "Prosecution will be improved, evidence collection will be better ... Circumstances will have improved."

He also said it is possible these circumstances have not arisen before and do not exist in any other country. "The European Union, the United States and other democracies need to understand that we need to make decisions according to our circumstances ... And we know best how to rid ourselves of terrorists."

The Parliament passed the 21st Amendment and the Pakistan Army Act, 1952, to establish the special courts after the massacre in the Army Public School, Peshawar, last year.

On April 16 the apex court had suspended executions of six militants who were awarded death sentence by these military courts.

The stay order was issued on an application filed by rights activist Asma Jehangir on behalf of the Supreme Court Bar Association (SCBA) after army chief Gen Raheel Sharif had ratified the death sentence to six militants and life imprisonment to one by the military courts.

The judgement on the 21st Amendment as well as the 18th Amendment will be the last major verdict by Chief Justice Nasirul Mulk as he will attain superannuation on Aug 16.

Over a five-month long hearing on the challenges to the 18th and 21st amendments was wrapped up by the Supreme Court on June 26.

Also read: SC reserves verdict on petitions challenging 18th, 21st amendments

A total of 31 constitutional petitions were taken up by the court, of which 16 petitions were regarding 18th Amendment the rest were about 21st amendment.

The 18th Amendment was passed by the Parliament during the last PPP government which introduced a new procedure for the appointment of superior court judges. The final judgement in the 18th Amendment case is still pending with the Supreme Court for the last four years though a full-court bench headed by then Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry had issued an order on Oct 21, 2010, suggesting that guidelines in the mode of appointment of superior court judges under Article 175-A of the constitution.

Later the Parliament brought the 19th Amendment by accepting almost all the proposals and incorporating in the Constitution as suggested by the Supreme Court.
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