A rural–urban proportional representation system (though different from the one devised by Fair Vote Canada) was first used in the
1918 Danish Folketing election: in
Copenhagen, MPs were elected by
proportional representation in a single tier; outside of Copenhagen, most MPs were elected via
first-past-the-post voting in single-member constituencies, and there were also 20 regional leveling seats which were intended to make the results more proportional, in addition to three national levelling seats. Iceland employed a rural–urban proportional system similar to the Danish one between
between 1946 and
June 1959. Under that system, twenty-one members of the
Althing were elected in single-member constituencies via first-past-the-post voting, while the remainder were elected using
D'Hondt method proportional representation: twelve members in two-member constituencies and eight members in
Reykjavík, as well as eleven members elected for nationwide leveling seats. Fair Vote Canada devised its own rural-urban system in response to a suggestion made by former
chief electoral officer Jean-Pierre Kingsley to the
House of Commons Special Committee on Electoral Reform on July 7, 2016. He proposed the idea of having proportional multi-member
ridings of 4 to 5 representatives in urban areas while retaining single-member ridings in rural areas.
Proposed usage in Canada A version of rural–urban proportional was proposed as one of three PR systems to be adopted in
British Columbia (BC) had voters decided to adopt a proportional voting system in a
2018 referendum in the province. It was the only proportional voting system proposed in BC's 2018 electoral reform referendum to include a proportional voting system previously used in Canada: Alberta and Manitoba used multi-member STV in major cities to elect provincial
members of the Legislative Assembly (MLAs) for 30 years from the 1920s to the 1950s. This approach produced proportional outcomes in the cities where STV was used, but not in rural areas, which used STV's non-proportional single-member equivalent,
instant-runoff voting (IRV), in single-member ridings. As a result, and because rural seats comprised a large proportion of the total, the overall election results under this system were not proportional. Rural–urban proportional as proposed for BC would have had similar combination of two electoral systems but would use mixed-member proportional in rural areas, which would ensure proportional results province-wide. ==Comparison to other proportional systems==