How was it a mere "inevitability"?
The unpopularity of the Liberals made it an inevitability.
Well, you do speak with the inherent chip on the shoulder one might expect from someone who got 2.7% vs a 45.7% NDP winner. Like, diminishing the NDP's achievement the way a loser in an ugly divorce case might trash-talk his ex-spouse or claim the "legal infrastructure" was unfair.
I'm sorry, what? You're making some bold assumptions. I'm not opposed to the electoral system because it disadvantages any one particular party. I'm not involved with the Greens at any level anymore. Haven't been a member since 2014.
I gave up on politics a long time ago. It's a miracle I still bother to vote, to be honest. There's no point. I guess I just do it in honour of all my homies in North Korea, China, Cuba, et al as a sort of pathetic show of how much better we have it when it comes to assigning leadership.
I'm opposed to the electoral system because it's an unfair and illogical mechanism for the imposition of false majorities and the disenfranchisement of millions.
It favours entrenched powers and discourages political collaboration. It imposes the will of the minority on the majority. It's shit maths.
It's a joke and embarrassment.
I'm already looking forward to hearing about how I should vote for people I disagree with in order to prevent other people I disagree with from attaining or retaining power.
At this point I'd vote for a dead dog, same result.
EDIT: I should add that my dislike of our electoral system is what got me involved with the Greens in the first place because at that time they were the only ones ever talking about electoral reform. It was not the other way around.