Why Floor Crossing Reveals the Character Flaws of Our Politics and Makes Us All a Little More Cynical

By Gazette Staff

May 24th, 2026

BURLINGTON, ON

 

We  picked this up from the Fraser Institute:

Politicians mistakenly credit their merit alone for their electoral victories, which can often become a self-serving myth. They forget that politics is a team activity.

Most voters choose the party, leader, or broader issues, rather than the personal qualities of the candidate on the ballot. Only a small minority (about six percent) votes for the individual.

When MPs cross the floor by leaving the party they were elected under, it stems from an inflated belief in their own importance rather than genuine voter representation. This self-delusion is not only poor judgment but erodes public trust.

By changing parties without voter consent, members of Parliament (MPs) break the implicit contract with voters.

A clear solution exists: parliamentarians who leave their party should either sit as independents until the next election or trigger a by-election. This would restore voter authority and democratic legitimacy.

There is precedent for such provisions, such as New Zealand’s “waka (canoe) jumping” rules. Canadian polling shows strong support for restricting or penalizing floor crossing.

Elected officials must remember that their duty is to serve the communities that elected them, not their own personal ambition. Reaffirming mandates when changing parties would help restore trust in an era of deepening political cynicism.

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