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The use of party voting in list PR, and MMP as well, may be unpopular among voters who are used to voting directly for a candidate.

Overall top-up levelling seats are likely not available in Canada where, constitutionally, votes may not cross provincial boundaries, as each province must have its own discrete representation - as in so many seats for this province, so many for that.

Multi-member districts with fair voting may achieve as fair rep. as list PR or MMP, excepting the most dispersed parties with shallow support. fair voting meaning STV or list PR.

Many list PR and regionalized MMP (Scottish-style) use as low District Magnitude as is available under STV. West Australia recently conducted STV election electing 37 members. Few list PR systems use DM of less than that, or at least only some use DM larger than that.

That wide DM does mean lowering of concept of local representation. so either causes or reflects more party-based thought than local sentiment.

Fine if party means true sentiment of voters (while of course local rep. has been blinded by historically being based on myth that a single-member can represent all those who happen to be penned in a micro-district that covers just part of a city.)

But if party means votes are funnelled into approving the agenda of party insiders, then not so good.

A multi-member district in many cases will cover just what a single member repesents in other contexts.

Everyone living in a city-wide district is represented by a mayor. therefore such a MMD can hardly be said to be too large to be one district, when one member represents that many. If one can cover that size, then surely five or 7 or 12 or whatever number of multiple members should be able to.

And that mayor, like a local sports team, is (or should be) seen as being local enough.

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