For example: Cariboo-Thompson which gets 5 candidates to vote for , will it be 'over run' by people from Kamloops where there is far more people? Will any of the 5 or whatever number for other ridings be spread out or will they stay in the large city, like Kamloops for the Cariboo-Thompson riding? Will people in Quesnel, Williams lake 'lose' their MLA?
I think the fear of being overrun by candidates from major centers is unfounded because of the way the STV is counted.... Once a candidate has a set percentage of votes (17% if there are 5 candidates running) no more of the votes cast for him are counted. (This is because he is elected and the extra votes are not needed) In that case the voter's second choice gets counted. That's the transfer part. When you vote for candidates in your riding you want to vote for only the people that you would like to see elected. (You can vote for more or less if you want)
If you haven't checked out this website, try it; click on your riding and follow the process.
http://bc.demochoice.org/ In my riding after I voted along with 750 others it showed 3 liberal and 2 NDP. Unfortunately my BC Conservative candidate doesn't make it..... On the positive side, Mr."I ain't done no crime" John Les, loses his seat!
Political Parties are still going to run candidates that cater to the smaller towns. If they try to stack all their candidates in the large centers they risk having their candidates compete against each other. I can't imagine a party would have a lot of credibility if it had candidates running against each other.
I think the smaller centers would actually have a better chance at representation if they field a strong candidate with strong community connections. Check out the website above and you will see how the ridings are divided.