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The problem of unelected leaders

The U.K., Alberta, B.C. and Manitoba all have leaders the general population didn’t vote for. Is that a problem? And how do you fix it?
New leader and incoming prime minister Rishi Sunak waves on Monday at Conservative Party headquarters in London. Sunak's victory ends the tumultuous six-week tenure of Liz Truss. (Jeff J. Mitchell/Getty Images)

Conservative Rishi Sunak has just become the third leader of the U.K. in two months, and he's got a mandate to rule until 2025. But many are questioning the process that led to him, and his predecessor Liz Truss, becoming prime minister in the first place: neither was chosen by British voters in a general election. They voted for a different Conservative MP, Boris Johnson, back in 2019 — before he was pushed out by a series of scandals. And they may not get to choose another prime minister until 2025.

This is not an uncommon situation in parliamentary democracies. B.C., Alberta and Manitoba now all have leaders that weren't voted in by the general public. 

Is this a bad thing? A bug, or a feature? And if it is a problem, what should be done about it?

Today, Aaron Wherry, a senior writer with CBC's parliamentary bureau, is here to dive into all of that.

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