It is disappointing that elected governments think they have the right to do anything they want. They vilify the policies and laws of the prior government and then dismantle them without any apparent reason other than the other party put it into place. It does not matter the party (NDP, Liberal or Conservative), it is the policy, the services or the laws that does not fit their ideology and therefore must be chucked out no matter the price the people pay.
When we question it they ignore us, phrase and twist words to make it look and sound better than it really is, or, try to make us think they know better than us and speak down to us in rather condescending words. They forget that we elected them to represent us and that they are responsible and accountable for all their actions and inactions to us. They need to remember that they must consult with us and to inform us of what they are going to do.
All too often large companies, the rich and well-funded special interests seem to be dictating to the politicians what they can and cannot do like the current federal scandal that has the appearance of businesses dictating the actions of politicians. Politicians are more worried about losing votes and power rather than doing what is right and what the law says.
What can be done? For starters we need legislation at the federal, provincial and local government level that allows the people to forward a petition for the recall of the politician. Once a specified threshold has been met there is a special election. There may be limits such as how long after an election before a petition can be issued and how many more months before the next election also. There needs to be a threshold on the number of people required and they must reside where the politician is and must be an eligible voter. It may not be a cure-all, but, if politicians know that if they do not work on our behalf we can turf them from office and replace them with a person who will work on our behalf.
Another thing is for us to stop being hyper-critical of anything they do. That isn't easy, but, if we look rationally at what they are doing and ask why and ask them why, maybe we will be more understanding of what is being done. Also when you are reading those
'articles' ask yourself where the information came from, are they checking their sources and do other news sites are reporting the same thing. I have seen
'articles' and while they seemed reasonable something was off and when I dug a wee bit I found that the 'Canadian' article was actually written outside of Canada.
The next thing is to completely remove their being funded by organizations and the rich. They need to have a hard dollar limit per person and only a real person can contribute. This will minimize the influence the rich and corporations have and force the politicians to solicit funds directly from the voters. It won't be perfect, but, if they can see in their pocket book the effect of not listening to us it may be another way to persuade them. Personally I have stopped taking calls looking for money and turfing their physical mail and emails and let them know why I have stopped and what it will take before I start contributing. Will it stop them? Right now it is 'no', not many are doing it and the hit on their bank accounts is minimal.
When there is an election try to go to the 'meet the candidate' meetings and have a short list of questions prepared for the candidates on the topics that matter to you. Ask the incumbent why did they do what they did, ask the other candidates on what they will do and let them know if they break their campaign promises it will cost them their job. Read up on the platforms and be a knowledgeable voter.
The next big, very big thing is to
vote. I have voted in
EVERY municipal, provincial and federal election since 1988. If you don't vote then don't complain as you not voting indicated that anyone who gets voted in is fine by you! Not everyone who I voted for got into office. All too many were a disappointment or their party was a disappointment. When that happens I look at the next election as an opportunity to correct that.
Participate in the process. Decades ago I volunteered for a campaign and got an excellent education on what it takes a candidate to run for office.