Technically, we elect a representative from our local community, and they band together to form a government. There is nothing wrong with that system and it has certain advantages over a proportional representation system, since you have a real person from your riding who you can petition when there is a local issue. You don't get that with proportional representation, instead you have a list of people none of who have any special interest in listening to local concerns.I call it rounding error.With 338 seats I'm really not that worried about an Atlantic province having an extra seat. This is on par with worrying about the mercury in vaccines when there's more mercury in tuna.
Seriously when this is the biggest problem left with our democracy we'll be in a pretty good place. When 39% of the people elected the power that rules our country (be it Conservative before or Liberal now) it seems an odd priority to worry about a source of imbalance that accounts for a 1.8% error in per capita representation.
The only true democracy by this argument is that we have 35,000,000 seats in Parliment.
It does not really matter if a few ridings are unusually large or small, what matters is that each community sends a representative to parliament.






