Liberal leadership hopeful Stephane Dion announced his new plan to increase the amount of women in Canadian government.
Dion is the first of the 11 leadership contenders to advance a detailed plan for achieving gender equity in Parliament. Canada currently ranks
45th in the world in terms of female representation in national legislatures, with only 20 per cent of the current 308 MPs being women.
As a start on improving that dismal record, Dion promised to ensure at least 33 per cent of Liberal candidates in the next election will be women and
to increase their representation in every subsequent election until 50 per cent is achieved. In last winter's election about 25 per cent of Liberal
candidates were women.
Dion also pledged that no riding would be allowed to stage a nomination contest until it could demonstrate it had seriously tried to recruit at least
one female contender. This is the same process followed by the NDP, which consistently produces more female candidates in elections than the other
parties.
cnews.canoe.ca
With half of the delegates being women, this sounds like a pretty good move for Dion. Another advantage he has going for him is that he's from
Quebec. The Liberal Party has a bit of a thing for selecting French-Canadians at their conventions and with the Conservatives rising from the dead in
Quebec, the Liberals need to be looking for even the teensiest of advantages.
If Harper somehow manages to keep his little group muzzled until the next election, the Liberals will need all the help they can get.