Talk:Safe seat

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I've merged the bulk of this article and redirected its title here. I dispute that stronghold is the usual term for a safe seat in Canadian politics; every relevant uses of "stronghold" I've ever seen has represented no more than generic use of the word stronghold. While this may in certain contexts identify a safe seat, it does not necessarily: references to the the 905, Mississauga, etc. as Ontario Tory strongholds prior to 2003 were surely legion, but approaching the 2003 election they were not considered safe, a doubt that was borne out by a Liberal sweep of many of them (in the 905; every seat in Mississauga). Further, the term "safe seat" or constructions "safe [party x] seat" are widely used and understood in Canada. I don't want Wikipedia to risk popularizing what's ultimately an idiosyncratic and potentially misleading usage. At the same time, I do assume good faith on the part of its editors - like the former article at 2.5 party system, it sounds like the sort of appelation an individual political science instructor or textbook might use, and an earnest student might log on to Wikipedia to helpfully write up. The trouble is that those expressions' broader application in Canadian political discourse then become overstated... Samaritan 01:11, 20 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Sorry I took so long to respond but I have not been checking my watchlist as often as I should. Anyways, I'm confused about the objections to the way I described the term Stronghold because said term is used in both conversation and the news-media pretty much exactly as I described it. For example:


The Chronicle Herald

"Charest’s presence at a campaign rally in the city’s east end was aimed at boosting the chances of rookie Liberal candidate Nathalie Malepart in a riding considered to be a Parti Quebecois stronghold." [1]


The Toronto Star

"Chin indicated election night that he will run again in Toronto-Danforth in the general election, but the riding is a long-time NDP stronghold. Some Liberals were privately kicking themselves that they didn't hold Chin out of the Toronto-Danforth fray and run him instead in the upcoming by-election in Parkdale-High Park, a much more winnable riding for the Liberals." [2]


The Source (Thunder Bay)

"Meanwhile, there is another hotly contested race in the riding of Toronto Danforth. Liberal candidate and former TV anchorman Ben Chin was out trying to lure voters. The riding has long been an NDP stronghold held by Marilyn Churley. Chin is in a tough battle with popular NDP candidate Peter Tabuns." [3]


The Ottawa Sun

"That's true. Looking at the poll figures, Grits are probably taking comfort from the fact two byelections are happening in their stronghold -- the Toronto area." [4]


The Hill Times

"In the Montreal riding of Papineau, Sen. Nolin noted that there was only a 50 per cent turnout in the last election in allophone neighborhoods, while francophone areas of the riding, once a Liberal stronghold, saw a 75 per cent voter turnout. Former Liberal foreign affairs minister Pierre Pettigrew, lost the riding to Bloc Québécois candidate Vivian Barbot. Sen. Nolin said the Conservatives are hoping to find explanations for all those trends in each neighbourhood."[5]


In retrospect, the term "Stronghold" is not as uniquely Canadian as I thought but a simple modification of the existing article as it was before merger can address that. I assume nothing but good intentions from Samaritan to make Wikipedia a better resource but I'm going to change it back in a few days unless someone can point out some error I'm missing. Incidentally I do have a Political Science degree and I can definitely say that the term "Stronghold" is used commonly in informal academic conversation in poly-sci circles. Martin-C 20:46, 2 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]

But "safe seat" is used in the Canadian context just as readily, and is more particular to the specific topic we're discussing. I get over a thousand cumulative Google results for "safe seat" or "safe [party x] seat" within the their "pages from Canada" subset. Meanwhile, there's nothing Canadian about this use of the generic "stronghold," and suggesting it's a Canadian term, I'm afraid, misleads. I don't want somebody standing up in class describing stronghold as a Canadian political term to be asked to explain these Google results (full index):

  • "democratic stronghold" -"new democratic" 83400
  • "democrat stronghold" -"new democrat" 9970
  • "republican stronghold" 76800

Stronghold, the disambiguation page, should continue to include safe seat, but the definition at the former Stronghold (Canadian political term) is no different from that of a safe seat - maybe it suggests a shade less certainty, but every political type can think of reported "safe seats" that have fallen - isn't uniquely Canadian, and it's very widely called a safe seat in Canada too. I also assume good intentions from Martin-C. :) Samaritan 02:16, 3 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Section order[edit]

The section order here seems a bit higgledy-piggledy to me: Canada, UK, US, Oz, NZ. Suggest either alphabetic order or North America/Europe/Oceania(?), though that may be OTT for Europe since every other European country has PR I think (perhaps not Malta?). Any comments?

BTW I like the brevity of this article-- not too much, not too little. SimonTrew (talk) 03:14, 14 July 2009 (UTC)[reply]


Proposed merger[edit]

Tantamount to election should be merged to Safe seat#United States. They are basically duplicate articles/sections, though there is information in each that would benefit both. No real reason to have them separate that I can see. – Philosopher Let us reason together. 04:35, 16 January 2013 (UTC)[reply]

+1 merge; good reasons; thanks for the proposal Hugh (talk) 23:47, 2 April 2013 (UTC)[reply]
-1 separate. "Safe seat" is a phrase used with respect to legislative districts, specifically here the safe seats in the U.S. House of Representatives. "Tantamount to election," however, is a phrase used with regard to any type of election (legislative, executive, judicial, whatever) in any country, state, or county where one party has such advantage as to render its internal decisions effectively the sole ones that matter in the jurisdiction as a whole. Rammer (talk) 20:12, 12 May 2013 (UTC)[reply]
-1 separate. I agree with Rammer. "Tantamount to election" is used in any context, legislative or not. - Presidentman talk · contribs (Talkback) 12:47, 28 May 2013 (UTC)[reply]

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Horribly sourced[edit]

Pretty unreliable write up. Most of the page is unsourced.--Wuerzele (talk) 09:08, 27 May 2022 (UTC)[reply]