Calgary Herald

Feds beef up law to prevent election meddling

- Joan Bryden

OTTAWA • The Trudeau government is beefing up legislatio­n aimed at making it easier for Canadians to vote and harder for foreign entities to interfere in federal elections.

It has sponsored a number of amendments to Bill C-76, including one that would ban advocacy groups from ever using money from foreign entities to conduct partisan campaigns.

When the bill was introduced last spring, the government proposed only to prohibit the use of foreign money by so-called third parties during the weeks immediatel­y prior to an election being called and during the actual campaign, known as the pre-writ and writ periods.

It is now proposing a blanket ban on the use of foreign funds at any time for the purpose of supporting or opposing a political party or candidate.

The government is also sponsoring an amendment that would require online platforms, such as Facebook and Google, to create a registry of all digital advertisem­ents placed by political parties or third parties during the pre-writ and writ periods and to ensure they remain visible to the public for two years.

Facebook allows users to view current partisan ads but they disappear from the platform once the ad buy wraps up.

The government is also proposing a number of other amendments, primarily aimed at bolstering the ability of Elections Canada to enforce election laws.

Bill C-76 is an omnibus bill that would reverse a number of changes wrought by the previous Conservati­ve administra­tion’s widely denounced Fair Elections Act. The new legislatio­n would restore the use of voter informatio­n cards as a valid form of identifica­tion and do away with measures that critics argued were designed to benefit the deep-pocketed Tories.

Among other things, it would limit spending by parties and advocacy groups during the three-month period before an election is officially called. Conservati­ves, who’ve been stalling the bill at committee since last spring, argue that unless government spending announceme­nts, ads and ministeria­l travel are banned at the same time, the prewrit spending cap amounts to Liberals trying to rig next year’s election in their favour.

The bill also represents a first stab at grappling with the spectre of social media being abused by bad actors — foreign or domestic — to manipulate the results of an election, exacerbate societal divisions, amplify hate messages or instil distrust in the electoral system.

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