'The west really doesn't count': Election called just as B.C. polls closed — again | CBC News (2025)

British Columbia

On Monday night, at about 7:15 p.m. PT, media outlets including CBC News projected the Liberals would form the next government.

Voters, experts consider how to make western voters feel like their ballots matter in federal elections

'The west really doesn't count': Election called just as B.C. polls closed — again | CBC News (1)

Courtney Dickson · CBC News

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'The west really doesn't count': Election called just as B.C. polls closed — again | CBC News (2)

Once again, a federal election call was made well before western votes had a chance to be considered, leaving some voters feeling disenfranchised, as if their votes don't matter.

On Monday night, at about 7:15 p.m. PT, media outlets, including CBC News, projected the Liberals would form the next government.

That was 15 minutes after polls had closed in B.C., and not long after they closed in Alberta. The election call was made knowing only the early results of the more Eastern provinces.

This is not unusual forBritish Columbians— it's certainly happened before —but for some, it is frustrating.

'The west really doesn't count': Election called just as B.C. polls closed — again | CBC News (3)

Two hundred of the country's ridings are in Ontario and Quebec, because that's where a high percentage of the Canadian population lives. Another 32 are situated in Atlantic Canada, so it's really no wonder federal elections are called before western provinces are counted.

But those early election declarations still hurt, said Sherry Boschman of Fort St. James, located about 113 kilometres northwest of Prince George.

"It just disappoints me."

Boschman has voted in B.C. for decadesand said she's grown used to this and worries thatother western voters are feeling left behind; she said her relatives in Saskatchewan feel the same way.

"It seems to me like the West really doesn't count."

Proportional representation

Electoral reform, something Boschman has tried to push for, could be a possible solution to the B.C.-doesn't-count conundrum, she said.

Sharon Sommerville, a spokesperson for the national campaign for electoral reform, Fair Vote, said the problem comes from the fact that election winners are determined by the number of seats a party wins, not by the overall number of votes it receives.

  • Electoral reform keeps stalling in Canada, but advocate says it isn't dead

If Canada were to consider proportional representation as opposed to the first-past-the-post electoral system we have now, the percentage of seats a party has in the legislature would reflect the percentage of people who voted for that party.

"If we were to count votes, and parties would get the seats they deserved based on the votes they received, it would mean all the ridings would be in play across the country," Sommerville said.

  • Split city: Some B.C. voters don't feel represented as urban centres carved into sprawling, rural ridings

Former prime minister Justin Trudeau had promised to move ahead with electoral reform in 2015, but abandoned the idea two years later. After Trudeau announced he would be stepping down asprime minister, he said that was his biggest regret from his time in office.

Polling times

Changing the times polls are open to be aligned nationwide would allow votes to be counted at the same time, rather than starting with the east and having the election decided before the west even starts counting.

In an email to CBC News, a spokesperson for Elections Canada said legislation around elections, such as staggered voting hours across the country, is up to Parliament.

"Just anecdotally, having worked during elections under the previous system, the current approach 'levels' the flow of results to a very large degree," they said.

They said the chief electoral officer will put together a report on the election and will answer questions before Parliament.

'Our votes do count'

Political scientist Stewart Prest agreed that, in some ways, getting the results of the election so quickly in the West is irksome, but he hopes British Columbians don't feel their votes don't matter.

For example, he said, once the Liberals were projected winners, B.C. could be the deciding factor as to whether it became a minority or majority government.

"The full election is the expression of the country as a whole, and B.C. is an important part of that," he said. "But it would take a very specific confluence of circumstances for us actually to tip the scales at one moment or another, even though our votes do count."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

'The west really doesn't count': Election called just as B.C. polls closed — again | CBC News (4)

Courtney Dickson

Journalist

Courtney Dickson is an award-winning journalist based in Vancouver, B.C.

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    'The west really doesn't count': Election called just as B.C. polls closed — again | CBC News (2025)

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