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Well, about a whole lot of things, but specifically about the nature of the CANADIAN system of government. Unfortunately, elections are not times to educate people.
Canadians do not elect an executive. We elect individual legislators. The portion of the executive consisting of the PM and ministers are then selected from among the legislators elected to the House of Commons -- by those legislators. The House selects the PM, who selects the ministers.
That is what is meant by the confidence of the House.
Political parties simply don't come into it. The legislator with the confidence of the most members is entitled to form a government as PM. Period.
There is nothing remotely similar to floor-crossing in this process.
In a House that consists of legislators from four parties in which no party has a majority of seats -- i.e. no legislator has automatic confidence of a majority of members -- no person or party was elected to govern. In fact, the same is true of a House in which there is a majority. Voters in each riding elected a member.
If my riding elects an NDP member (which it will), and the Conservative Party gets a plurality of seats, has Canada elected a Conservative government? Absolutely not.
In practical terms, yes, backroom deals are not the way to do it. And in previous minority governments, e.g. Liberal with NDP support, I don't recall backroom deals. The recent attempted coalition was not a backroom deal, it was public and clear.
"Who is to say that the Conservatives (or any other party) wouldn't just absorb another party to ensure they obtain a Majority."
What does that mean? Have they acquired super absorption powers?
"We will have constant opposition parties constantly merging, forming, splitting and making arrangements to suit their desire for power."
Canada has a history of parties coming and going, merging and reforming. Most countries do. Personally, I'd have it no other way. Otherwise, we'd look like the US has looked for decades: a two-party system composed of often virtually indistinguishable people and policies.
You can call it "to suit their desire for power" if you want, but I don't have to agree. More often it suits the circumstances of the day, as issues that parties are sometimes organized around wax and wane, or depends on changes within parties that make them more or less compatible with other parties.
There are irreconcilable differences in the views of the electorate. They are represented by multiple parties. That's Canada.
"I would like to think that our democracy would provide some allowances without turning the system into a system lacking leaders and encouraging 'moving to the highest bidder'."
I have no idea what that means. Parties bidding for the support of other parties in the House? Good thing, I say. Better than majority governments forcing their legislative agenda onto an electorate when more than half of that electorate may have voted against that party and its agenda.
That bidding got us universal health care, public pensions, and all the other "bids" that the Liberals have had to offer the NDP in the past in order to maintain confidence.
The Conservatives in this round have never bid. They maintained their grip on confidence based purely on their knowledge that the other parties, for various reasons, did not want an election. And when the Conservatives decided they wanted an election (even though they're the ones who brought in the fixed-term rule), they manipulated events to go that way -- by making no effort to maintain the confidence of the House and doing everything to lose it. And then, like the true demagogues they are, painting the opposition as the villains, when in fact the opposition was so weak that all it had done all along was nothing, and let itself be manipulated throughout.
I would have been very happy with a Liberal minority government at the end of this election, no matter how it came about and whether or not the Conservatives had the plurality of seats. Because I would have been one of the majority of Canadians who voted for a party that was not the Conservative Party, and I believe that that majority is entirely entitled to see its choices produce a government.
But the way things are going, hmm, I might not have to settle for that ... ;)
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