The Surprising Case of Public Participation and Social Media Usage in Canada’s Redistribution Process

Article 5 / 11 , Vol. 47 No. 1 (Spring)

The Surprising Case of Public Participation and Social Media Usage in Canada’s Redistribution Process

During each electoral boundary redistribution process, members of the public are invited to provide feedback to the commissions’ proposed reforms to federal electoral boundaries. While participation rates in public consultation processes during the 20th century are reportedly low, little research has examined participation rates in the 21st century. Additionally, how public participation has been affected by the creation of redistribution social media accounts for the 2023 process is not yet understood. This article seeks to address these gaps. The results show that while (formal) public participation in the process has increased in the 21st century, a closer examination of the data shows there has been a mild decrease in participation for 2023 in comparison to 2013. However, if comments submitted through social media to the commissions are included, then participation rates for the 2023 process increase substantially compared to past decades.

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Messaging, Partisanship and Politics: Discourse in Standing Committees in a Minority Parliament

Article 6 / 10 , Vol 44 No. 4 (Winter)

Messaging, Partisanship and Politics: Discourse in Standing Committees in a Minority Parliament

Valere Gaspard is a graduate student at the University of Ottawa, a research fellow at Western University’s Leadership and Democracy Lab, and an alumnus of the Parliamentary Internship Programme (2020-2021). This is a revised version of the essay he wrote as part of his internship.

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