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Fair Vote Canada

Electoral reform nonprofit organization


Summary

Electoral reform nonprofit organization

FieldValue
nameFair Vote Canada
imageFair Vote Canada logo.svg
founded_dateJuly 27, 2001
founderChris Billows, Doug Bailie and Larry Gordon
location88 North Drive
Kitchener, Ontario
N2M 1K8
coordinates
key_people{{plainlist
* Anita Nickerson (executive director)<ref>{{cite weburlhttp://www.fairvote.ca/contacttitle=Contact Us!publisher=Fair Vote Canadaaccess-date=March 15, 2022 }}
area_servedCanada
focusElectoral reform in Canada, proportional representation
homepage

Kitchener, Ontario N2M 1K8

  • Anita Nickerson (executive director) Fair Vote Canada (FVC) () is a grassroots, nonprofit, multi-partisan citizens' movement for electoral reform in Canada. Headquartered in Kitchener, Ontario, it promotes the introduction of an element of proportional representation for elections at all levels of government and throughout civil society, instead of the first-past-the-post electoral system currently used at all levels of government in Canada.

Purpose

Its aim is "to gain broad, multi-partisan support for an independent, citizen-driven process to allow Canadians to choose a fair voting system based on the principles that all voters are equal, and that every vote must count." Fair Vote Canada does not advocate for any particular form of proportional representation but has been involved in the design and discussion of different models from a made-in-Canada perspective.

It has worked to mobilize its supporters in support of proportional representation in the context of several initiatives coming out of the Canadian provinces and was one of the prime drivers of citizens' engagement federally as part of the public consultation process in 2016.

The organization is guided by a statement of purpose identifying five goals:

  • proportional representation
  • positive voter choice
  • fair representation
  • geographic representation
  • government accountability to voters

History

Fair Vote Canada was created in June 2001, following a founding conference in Ottawa. It is a membership organization headed by a national council of 15 members and has chapters and action teams across the country.

Over the years, it has:

  • organized events, tables and presentations
  • written letters, articles and op-eds
  • educated and lobbied MPs and politicians
  • pulled together research and worked with academics
  • participated in six referendum campaigns (two in PEI, one in Ontario and three in BC)
  • maintained a strong social media presence through its website and on Facebook and Twitter

Additionally, it has submitted briefs to numerous electoral reform committees and commissions.

In British Columbia and Quebec, there exist parallel organizations, Fair Voting BC and Mouvement Démocratie Nouvelle respectively, which are independent of Fair Vote Canada but share similar goals. Fair Vote Canada collaborates closely with these organizations.

Fair Vote Canada strives to maintain a nationwide, multi-partisan support base, with members from all points on the political spectrum, regions and walks of life. Its work is endorsed by its National Advisory Board, which includes prominent Conservatives, Liberals, New Democrats, and Greens. It supports political parties and politicians that share its aspirations for electoral reform.

Documentation

Fair Vote Canada maintains a Review of Evidence based on comparative research about countries with different types of electoral systems and tracks the various Commissions, Assemblies and Reports that have been produced in Canada and its provinces over the years. Fair Vote Canada's "Resources" webpage provides a wide range of public education materials.

Democracy Day

Main article: Democracy Day (Canada)

On August 2, 2011, Fair Vote Canada launched Democracy Day and Democracy Week in Canada annual events encouraging participation, education, and celebration of Canadian democracy. In its first year events were held by different groups in cities across Canada. Fair Vote Canada designated Democracy Day to be Canada's celebration of the United Nations International Day of Democracy and Democracy Week to be the seven-day calendar week in which Democracy Day falls (September 15 each year). A number of Canadian non-profit and governmental organizations participate in and promote the events, including Elections Canada.

References

References

  1. "Contact Us!". Fair Vote Canada.
  2. (16 June 2025). "Electoral reform keeps stalling in Canada, but advocate says it isn't dead". CBC News.
  3. (26 April 2025). "CANADA ELECTION 2025: Is it time to change our first-past-the-post voting system?". Inside Halton.
  4. "About Fair Vote Canada". Fair Vote Canada.
  5. "Contact Us!". Fair Vote Canada.
  6. Pilon, Dennis. (August 2007). "The Politics of Voting: Reforming Canada's Electoral System". Emond Publishing.
  7. (August 21, 2009). "Fair Vote Canada Statement of Purpose". Fair Vote Canada.
  8. "Fair Vote Canada Submission to The Special Parliamentary Committee on Electoral Reform". Parliament of Canada.
  9. "Submission to the BC Public Consultations for a Referendum on Proportional Representation". Government of British Columbia.
  10. "Contact".
  11. "A Look at the Evidence - 2020-09-04".
  12. "Handouts and References".
  13. (2 August 2011). "Fair Vote Canada Newsletter August 2011". Fair Vote Canada.
  14. "Invitation aux médias - 15 septembre Journée de la démocratie". Mouvement pour une démocratie nouvelle (MDN).
  15. "Fair Vote Canada Launches Democracy Week". Fair Vote Canada.
  16. "International Day of Democracy". United Nations.
  17. (15 September 2011). "Happy Democracy Day, Canada! Or Is it?". Huffington Post Canada.
  18. "PR: Young Canadians Invited to Create "The Art of Democracy"". Elections Canada.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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