杜魯多提出聯邦自由黨真實變革的計劃

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渥太華-聯邦自由黨黨領杜魯多,今天發表計劃要重建公開和透明政府。
“哈珀10年領導,渥太華已經破爛不堪。這是一項全面整改計劃。這是真實的變革。”杜魯多表示,“我們的計劃建立在我們已經實施的方案上,如主動披露國會議員開支以及將參議員排除在聯邦自由黨黨團之外。不過,今天宣佈的計劃遠超越於此。這是一項全面改革的議程,其中心思想基於一個簡單的想法:透明政府才是一個好政府。”
聯邦自由黨的計劃是要提升透明尺度和加強問責制,使政府工作方式更現代化。我們將實施如下辦法,包括但不限於:
• 要求政府數據及信息默認公開;
• 通過允許國會議員及政府監管機構更多獨立權,使加拿大國民可以在渥太華發聲;
• 停止參議院黨派制;
• 通過推動選舉改革,確保公開和公平的選舉;
• 強化加拿大選舉局,禁止政府黨派色彩廣告;
• 制定計劃及政策要以事實為依據;
• 用更包容和鼓勵參與的決策過程,為加拿大國民提供更好和更及時的服務;
• 聯邦自由黨內閣成員男女比例一致。
“加拿大人已經聽了太多,他們想要看到實施真正的變革,而不是僅為了選票而做的承諾。”杜魯多表示,“有了這個全面的計劃,聯邦自由黨將為政府帶來新的陽光,確保政府工作重點是服務加拿大國民。”
 
渥太华已经破败不堪,大实话啊
世界最宜居城市。omg。
 
哦,自由党好像提出选民如果不参加选举,会小额罚款。
我不知道想出这一条的,是不是大脑没发育好啊?你就不怕那些不愿被罚款的,去选举,就选你的对手一票啊?!
自由党和国民党差不多,内斗,党争,短期内没希望的。
那小堵路多,有能传话的,告诉他一声,能不开口,就尽量别开口了,每次信口雌黄后都是亲痛敌快,行行好了。
 
小土豆这次能上位吗? 加拿大历史第二年轻的总理?
 
南边老美今年大选的焦点将是贫富差距和中产阶级工作流失。北边两党一个喊着给资本家继续减税,一个折腾了半天就整出来了这一堆虚无漂渺的东西。就等着同阿省一样NDP上台吧。
 
这些听上去都是老生常谈的调调。没上台,说得天花乱坠,上台后我行我素。跟安省自由党一个样。
 
这两项,需要修改法律吧?

• 停止參議院黨派制;
• 通過推動選舉改革,確保公開和公平的選舉;
 
Justin Trudeau vows to end 1st-past-the-post voting in platform speech
Liberal leader Justin Trudeau sketches out his party's tax policy, accountability plan
By Rosemary Barton, Trinh Theresa Do, CBC News Posted: Jun 16, 2015 5:00 AM ET Last Updated: Jun 16, 2015 8:09 PM ET

Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau vowed that the upcoming general election will be the last one using the first-past-the-post voting system.
Speaking about his party's vision for what a future Liberal government would look like, he highlighted transparency and accountability in an election-style speech at the Chateau Laurier hotel in Ottawa Tuesday morning.
"We'll make sure that Canadians have a stronger voice in Ottawa — a voice that reflects and represents them," Trudeau said.
His speech struck many hopeful notes and tried to draw a stark contrast between the Liberals and the "cynical" Conservatives under Prime Minister Stephen Harper.
"Harper has turned Ottawa into a partisan swamp," Trudeau said, accusing the prime minister of "promoting partisan interests at the expense of public trust."
"It wasn't like that before," he said, harkening back to the time when his father, Pierre Elliott Trudeau, was prime minister.
"To use an example from my father's day, ministers didn't attack Supreme Court justices just to raise money and whip up support," he said.
Trudeau's proposal to end first-past-the-post is intended to "make every vote count."
The system badly distorts voters' choices, allowing a party to win the majority of seats in the House of Commons with less than 40 per cent of the vote and delivering wildly different seat counts to parties that win similar shares of the vote.
Gender parity in appointments
In his speech, he committed to introducing electoral reform legislation within 18 months of forming a government. It would be based on the recommendations of a special, all-party parliamentary committee mandated to fully and fairly study alternatives to the first-past-the-post system, including ranked ballots and proportional representation.
The committee would also explore the notions of mandatory voting and online voting.
Among other things, he unveiled proposals to empower backbench MPs and Commons committees, make government more transparent and responsive to citizens and end partisanship in the scandal-plagued Senate.
Trudeau also promised to ensure gender parity in decision-making and government appointments.
"We know that there is no more important symbol than that of the federal cabinet. My Liberal cabinet will have an equal number of women and men," he said.
Many of the elements of the 32-point plan have been announced piecemeal by Trudeau over the past couple of years, such as his proposals to strengthen access to information laws and to return the Senate to its intended role as an independent chamber of sober second thought.
But others are new or build on previous promises, including the 18-month deadline for introducing a new electoral system that produces a House of Commons more reflective of how Canadians vote.
Overhaul Canada Revenue
Other parts of the Liberals' plan will overhaul the way Canada Revenue Agency deals directly with Canadians. But the most politically charged move would be to place a clear definition around what constitutes political work for Canadian charities.
In recent years, the Conservative government has cracked down on what it calls "excessive political advocacy" by some charities. Some 60 charities have been audited since 2012 for their so-called political work, including Environmental Defence and Dying with Dignity. Some have lost their charitable status.
Opponents have slammed the government for trying to stifle criticism of Conservative policies.
The Liberals would not end the audits per se, but would instead end what the party calls the "political harassment" of charities. Trudeau promised new rules for charities while still maintaining they can "develop and advocate for public policy in Canada."
The Liberals also proposed new changes to help Canadians file their taxes — promising, for instance, that the Canada Revenue Agency would be more "proactive" in helping Canadians take full advantage of the tax credits available to them.
For example, if a parent forgets to claim a particular child tax credit, the revenue agency would actually contact the individual in order to help them make the change to their tax form.
The policy would also suggest the CRA could actually file taxes for Canadians if they have not had a substantial change to their income tax profile since the previous year.
Trudeau also proposed bringing back the long-form census, reducing fees for Access to Information requests to $5, and banning wasteful partisan advertising.
Liberals 'flashing left, then turning right,' NDP says
NDP Leader Tom Mulcair also spoke about his party's policies today, in a speech to the Economic Club of Canada outlining his vision for building the economy and a strong middle class.
During a scrum with reporters, he gave a familiar NDP line in response to an equally familiar question about whether Mulcair was worried that the Liberal and NDP are starting to look similar with their respective platforms.
"Well, imitation is the highest form of flattery," he said. "But Canadians know that they can trust the NDP to actually do these things."
He added in French that Trudeau, for years, had no solid policy ideas and then suddenly introduced a whole raft of them, including ones he voted against over the past several months.
"The third party has a long history of flashing left, then turning right."
The governing Conservatives have introduced a number of new legislation in recent weeks — including a new bill coming Tuesday from Justice Minister Peter MacKay to increase penalties for impaired driving — with little chance of passage before Parliament rises for the summer and the election.
Government House Leader Peter Van Loan said Monday the bills will form the "framework" for the Conservatives' campaign.
 
Trudeau announces plan to kill first-past-the-post by the next election

Joan Bryden, The Canadian Press
| June 16, 2015 3:25 PM ET
More from The Canadian Press
OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau wants this fall’s national vote to be the last federal election conducted under the first-past-the-post electoral system.
And, if the Liberal leader becomes prime minister, it may also be the last election in which Canadians can choose not to vote, as well as the last in which the only way to vote is by marking an X on a paper ballot.
Changing the way Canadians vote is just one element of a sweeping, 32-point plan to “restore democracy in Canada” that Trudeau announced Tuesday.
Some of the measures have been previously announced, such as strengthening access-to-information laws; empowering backbench MPs by allowing more free votes and beefing up legislative oversight by Commons committees; and ending partisanship in the scandal-plagued Senate.
Others are new or build upon previous commitments. Among other things, Trudeau promised a Liberal government would:
  • Reform question period in the House of Commons so that one day each week would be devoted solely to grilling the prime minister.
  • Impose spending limits on political parties between elections, not just during election campaigns.
  • Appoint an equal number of men and women to cabinet and adopt a government-wide appointment policy to ensure gender parity and greater representation of aboriginal people and other minorities.
  • Create performance standards for services offered by the federal government, complete with streamlined application processes, reduced wait times and money-back guarantees.
  • Create individualized, secure online accounts for Canadians who want to access all their government benefits and review key documents.
  • Perhaps the most ambitious promise, however, is Trudeau’s vow to do away with first-past-the-post (FPTP) in time for the next election.
The current system badly distorts voters’ choices, allowing a party to win the majority of seats in the House of Commons with less than 40 per cent of the vote, and delivering wildly different seat counts to parties that win similar shares.

Trudeau promised he’d introduce electoral reform legislation within 18 months of forming government. The legislation would be based on the recommendations of a special, all-party parliamentary committee mandated to fully and fairly study alternatives to first-past-the-post, including ranked ballots and proportional representation.

The committee would also explore the notions of mandatory voting and online voting.

The Liberal party sought grassroots reaction to the notion of legally compelling Canadians to vote, as is done in Australia, in a survey last summer. But Trudeau has not committed to take it any further until now.

The survey followed an analysis by one of Trudeau’s senior policy advisers, University of Ottawa academic Robert Asselin, who advocated mandatory voting and the introduction of preferential or ranked ballots as ways to re-engage Canadians in the political process.

Turnout in federal elections has plunged from a high of almost 80 per cent of eligible voters in 1958 to a record low of 58.8 per cent in 2008, according to Elections Canada. It rebounded slightly in 2011 to 61.1 per cent.

Under Asselin’s proposal, eligible voters would be legally required to vote but would have the option of voting for “none of the above.” Those who didn’t vote would face a small fine.

Electronic voting has also been touted as a way to entice busy Canadians to cast ballots. But Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s Conservative government last year effectively scotched Elections Canada’s plans to experiment with online voting, requiring any such tests to be approved by Parliament.

First-past-the-post has long been viewed as the primary culprit behind declining turnout, contributing to Canadians’ belief that their votes don’t count.

Trudeau personally favours replacing it with preferential balloting, in which voters rank their first, second, third and subsequent choices. If no candidate receives an absolute majority on the first ballot, the last-place candidate is eliminated and his or her supporters’ second-choice votes are counted. That continues until one candidate receives over 50 per cent.
However, Trudeau has also said he’s willing to consider proportional representation, a more complex reform for which there are a variety of possible models. Essentially, it involves electing multiple representatives for each constituency, with the seats divvied up in proportion to the share of votes won by each party in each riding.
 
渥太華-聯邦自由黨黨領杜魯多,今天發表計劃要重建公開和透明政府。
“哈珀10年領導,渥太華已經破爛不堪。這是一項全面整改計劃。這是真實的變革。”杜魯多表示,“我們的計劃建立在我們已經實施的方案上,如主動披露國會議員開支以及將參議員排除在聯邦自由黨黨團之外。不過,今天宣佈的計劃遠超越於此。這是一項全面改革的議程,其中心思想基於一個簡單的想法:透明政府才是一個好政府。”
聯邦自由黨的計劃是要提升透明尺度和加強問責制,使政府工作方式更現代化。我們將實施如下辦法,包括但不限於:
• 要求政府數據及信息默認公開;
• 通過允許國會議員及政府監管機構更多獨立權,使加拿大國民可以在渥太華發聲;
• 停止參議院黨派制;
• 通過推動選舉改革,確保公開和公平的選舉;
• 強化加拿大選舉局,禁止政府黨派色彩廣告;
• 制定計劃及政策要以事實為依據;
• 用更包容和鼓勵參與的決策過程,為加拿大國民提供更好和更及時的服務;
• 聯邦自由黨內閣成員男女比例一致。
“加拿大人已經聽了太多,他們想要看到實施真正的變革,而不是僅為了選票而做的承諾。”杜魯多表示,“有了這個全面的計劃,聯邦自由黨將為政府帶來新的陽光,確保政府工作重點是服務加拿大國民。”

看了看两家英文媒体的报道,才知道这中文在说什么,才知道特鲁多是在什么场合发表了上述讲话。

“今天”是哪天,过几天再来看这文字,还是“今天”。

自由党完全可以事先写好新闻稿。他们的中文新闻公报写出这个水平,不可思议。
 
最后编辑:
Justin Trudeau vows to end 1st-past-the-post voting in platform speech
Liberal leader Justin Trudeau sketches out his party's tax policy, accountability plan
By Rosemary Barton, Trinh Theresa Do, CBC News Posted: Jun 16, 2015 5:00 AM ET Last Updated: Jun 16, 2015 8:09 PM ET
.

应文太长费眼,他这什么意思?是设立提名委员会和功能组别吗?要不要候选人都让执政的党中央遴选一遍?:tx:
 
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