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EDITORIAL: Election results the democratic process at work

The voting public has decided the results of the Sept. 20 federal election
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A sample ballot box is seen at Elections Canada’s offices in Gatineau, Que., Friday, Sept. 20, 2019. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Justin Tang

The Sept. 20 federal election has run its course, but some in Canada continue to see it a colossal waste of money, a $610 million expense during the fourth wave of the COVID-19 pandemic that resulted in little change to the structure of the House of Commons.

Once again, the federal Liberals, under Justin Trudeau, form the governing party after winning 159 out of 338 seats in the House of Commons. The Conservative Party won 119 seats to retain its role as the official opposition. The Bloc Quebecois won 33 seats, the New Democrats won 25, the Greens won two and the People’s Party of Canada did not win any.

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These numbers are all similar to the 2019 federal election, raising the question of whether there was any point in sending Canadians to the polls less than two years after the last federal election. Some have suggested the money could have been better spent on social programs or pandemic relief efforts.

The price of this election is significant, but it’s the cost of having a democracy. In other parts of the world, our electoral system is an unattainable dream.

Earlier this year, the Democracy Index rankings placed Canada’s democracy in fifth place out of 167 countries around the world. The others in the top spots were Norway, Iceland, Sweden and New Zealand. The annual index, conducted each year by The Economist, a London-based news magazine, listed only 23 countries, with just 8.4 per cent of the world’s population, as full democracies.

More than one-third of the world’s population are in countries classified as authoritarian regimes. These are dictatorships or countries where political pluralism does not exist, or where free and fair elections do not occur.

While not all are happy with the results of our federal election, there have not been widespread accusations of election fraud or rigged results. The results are trusted.

What we have is the envy of many around the world.

While many see our recent federal election as a waste of time and money, it would be far worse to live in a country without free and fair elections.

— Black Press

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