Public bug reported:

When there is some package A that depends on either B or C, the
following happens:

When user uninstalls B, installation of C is forced. If the user then
uninstalls C, installation of B is forced. This leaves the user puzzled,
not knowing how to get rid of B and C.

I observed this with packages "firefox" and "thunderbird" being B and C,
and package A being "xul-ext-mozvoikko". This happened in Lubuntu 16.04,
with Synaptic v0.83. I realized what the root cause was only after
forcing the uninstallation of Thunderbird from command line using dpkg
and then starting Synaptic and finding a broken package there.

I think the preferred behaviour would be for Synaptic to:
  - Explain the situation and let the user choose whether package A should also 
be uninstalled or B installed instead.
  - At least explain what is going on: why uninstalling one package forces the 
installation of another.

Thank you for considering this buggish feature.

** Affects: synaptic (Ubuntu)
     Importance: Undecided
         Status: New

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1658223

Title:
  Uninstalling one package forces installation of another without
  showing the root cause

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