Medicine Hat News

PM open to election law reform amendments

- JOAN BRYDEN

OTTAWA Justin Trudeau says he’ll welcome amendments from opposition parties to his government’s proposed reforms to laws governing federal political parties and elections.

The prime minister stressed his openness to amendments to Bill C-76 in response to Conservati­ve demands Tuesday that government advertisin­g and ministeria­l spending announceme­nts and travel be banned during the three months preceding an election call.

And he did it again in response to Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer’s contention that the bill will do nothing to prevent advocacy groups from using foreign money to influence the outcome of elections.

But Scheer questioned Trudeau’s sincerity, asserting that the prime minister "ordered" Elections Canada to implement the changes in the bill, introduced earlier this month, before it had received "one word of debate or one vote."

“If that is not trying to rig the rules in his favour, I do not know what is,” he charged, accusing Trudeau of “ignoring Parliament and trying to ram through his preferred electoral system changes.”

New Democrat MP Nathan Cullen, meanwhile, accused the government of “bullying” opposition parties by threatenin­g to cut short debate on the bill.

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, including restoring the use of voter informatio­n cards as a valid form of identifica­tion and doing away with measures that critics argued were designed to benefit the deep-pocketed Conservati­ves.

Among other things, the bill would limit spending by parties and advocacy groups during the three-month period before an election is officially called.

But unless government spending announceme­nts, ads and ministeria­l travel are banned at the same time, Scheer contended the bill will benefit the ruling Liberals and harm opposition rivals. “What he is doing is limiting the ability of opposition parties to engage with Canadians while refusing to apply those same restrictio­ns to his own government,” he said.

Trudeau responded by taking repeated jabs at the way in which the Harper government rammed through the Fair Elections Act, over the strenuous objections of opposition parties, the chief electoral officer and most electoral experts. And he insisted his government will be different.

“We encourage members opposite to come forward with amendments and proposals because, unlike them when they were in power, we are open to suggestion­s on how to improve Canadian democracy,” he said.

On the issue of foreign-funded advocacy groups, Trudeau said he looks forward to “reasoned amendments and thoughtful proposals” from opposition MPs.

But he noted it was the Harper Conservati­ves who branded environmen­tal groups as “eco-terrorists and tried to limit their capacity to vote and to be heard in our public sphere.” Unlike them, he said: “We believe in the freedom of speech.”

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Justin Trudeau

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