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From the Editor
Authors:John Purdy
Institution:1. Department of Political Studies, St. Thomas More College, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canadadavid.mcgrane@usask.ca;3. Faculty of Arts and Science, School of Law and Political Studies, Concordia University, Université de Québec à Montréal-Legal Studies, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Abstract:ABSTRACT

The “Orange Wave” in the 2011 federal election produced the largest and most diverse federal NDP caucus in Canadian history. This article uses interviews with members of this caucus to study their legislative experiences. It finds that a shared commitment to creating social democratic change generated an overarching similarity in the experiences of these MPs across sociodemographic groups. NDP MPs that were young, visible minorities, and from Quebec were not found to have significantly different legislative experiences when compared to the NDP MPs not from those groups. Female NDP MPs did report different legislative experiences compared to male NDP MPs, but these differences were limited and more present among younger female NDP MPs. The conclusion argues that ideology shapes legislative experiences, interviewing method affects the results of legislative experiences studies, the intersectionality of MPs’ identities could be important, and gathering large cross-party interview samples of Canadian MPs is a challenge.
Keywords:New Democratic Party of Canada  Canadian House of Commons  gender  visible minorities  Quebec
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