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The Commission on Prince Edward Island's Electoral Future

Commission to Kick-off Education Program with Panel Discussion

The Commission on P.E.I.'s Electoral Future will host a panel discussion open to the public on June 15th at 6:30 PM at the Coles Building, Richmond Street in Charlottetown. The panel will discuss the pros and cons of the proposed Mixed Member Proportional System and the First-Past-the-Post System, which is currently in use. Guests and members of the general public will then be invited to make comments and pose questions to the panellists.

There will be four members on the panel: the Honourable Norman Carruthers, David McLaughlin, Dr. Bill Cross and Dr. Jennifer Smith. Carruthers was the Chair of the Prince Edward Island Electoral Reform Commission. The Commission report, released in 2003, recommended that the Province modify its electoral system to a Mixed Member Proportional System. This system would ensure that the popular vote would be better reflected in the legislature.

David McLaughlin served as the Chair of the New Brunswick Commission on Legislative Democracy which completed its work in December of 2004. McLaughlin will share his experiences with electoral reform in New Brunswick. Dr. Bill Cross, a political science professor and Chair of the Canadian Studies Department at Mount Allison University, is an expert on electoral systems. He also served as the Director of Research for the New Brunswick Commission on Legislative Democracy. Dr. Jennifer Smith, who is the Chair of the Political Science Department at Dalhousie University, will present the benefits of the First-Past-the-Post System.

The Commission has been given the mandate to propose a Mixed Member Proportional System for consideration by Islanders. That proposal was released on May 27th. Government has also asked the Commission to conduct an education program designed to increase, among the general public, an awareness of the present First-Past-the-Post System and the proposed Mixed Member Proportional System. Following the education program, which will include public meetings to be held in early Fall, Islanders will be asked to vote in a plebiscite to determine which of the two electoral systems they prefer.

The panel discussion will also be broadcast on the World Wide Web. Internet viewers can watch the live proceedings at www.electoralfuture.pe.ca.

For further information or comment please contact: Leonard Russell, Chair Commission on P.E.I.'s Electoral Future (902) 886-2665

2005-06-09