National Post

Outcome of a pandemic election could take a few days to tally up

Elections Canada looks at safety first

- Joan Bryden

OTTAWA • Canadians may have to wait a few days to find out the final results of a federal election called in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, Canada’s chief electoral officer warns.

And they may find themselves voting in unusual places or having to go a bit further afield to cast their ballots.

But Stéphane Perrault wants Canadians to know there’s nothing nefarious about the departures from the norm.

They’re part of a process Elections Canada has devised to ensure an election can be conducted safely and produce trustworth­y results while the country remains in the grip of COVID-19.

“It’s important for Canadians to understand that this is part of the plan of deliberate choices that we’ve made,” Perrault said in an interview with The Canadian Press.

“It’s not an accident, it’s not a sign of things going wrong but in fact is part of the process as we’ve designed it in these very unique circumstan­ces of the pandemic.”

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is widely expected to pull the plug on his minority Liberal government later this month for an election in mid- to late September. All parties are gearing up for a campaign, even as chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam is warning that Canada is on the verge of a fourth wave of COVID-19, driven by the more infectious Delta variant.

Should a summer election call occur, Elections Canada is ready for a potentiall­y explosive increase in the number of Canadians who choose to vote by mail during the pandemic — as many as five million, compared to fewer than 50,000 in the 2019 election.

Perrault said mail-in ballots will not be counted until the day after the election, in order to allow them to be received right up to the last minute before polls close and to give election officials time subsequent­ly to carefully conduct checks to ensure no one who voted by mail also cast a ballot in person.

In a worst-case scenario, he said it may take two to five days to complete the mail-in ballot count.

That could mean the results of close races in some ridings won’t be known immediatel­y. And, if the national results are tight, it could mean the overall outcome — which party wins the most seats, whether it has a minority or majority — could be equally in limbo.

But Perrault said the time lag is necessary to guarantee the integrity of the results.

“As much as we like early results, I think Canadians expect that we do it right.”

Mail-in ballots during last fall’s U.S. election became fodder for Donald Trump’s unfounded claims that voter fraud robbed him of the presidency. Millions of Republican supporters and conspiracy theorists continue to believe that, underminin­g the legitimacy of the American electoral process.

But Perrault is hopeful the vast majority of Canadians will continue to have confidence in the electoral process here. Unlike the U.S., he noted there is no “deep partisan divide” in Canada over the issue of voting by mail.

“All parties see the need to have vote by mail, they understand that we have controls in place ... People should not expect what happened in the U.S. to happen in a federal election in Canada.”

In anticipati­on of a dramatic increase in demand for mail-in voting, Elections Canada plans to make it possible to apply online for mail-in vote kits. Voters who fear their mail-in ballots won’t be received on time will be able to drop off their ballots at their local polling place on voting day or have a friend do it for them.

The names of anyone who is issued a mail-in ballot will be crossed out on voting lists as having already voted. Individual­s who don’t receive their mail-in ballot by voting day may swear an oath to that effect and still vote in person.

However, the mail-in ballots of anyone found to have voted in person will not be counted.

Elections Canada still expects the majority of Canadians will choose to vote in person. The agency has stocked up on face masks, sanitizers, single-use pencils and Plexiglas partitions to ensure the safety of voters and poll workers.

THIS IS PART OF THE PLAN OF DELIBERATE CHOICES THAT WE’VE MADE.

 ?? FRED CHARTRAND / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? “All parties see the need to have vote by mail, they understand that we have controls in place ... People should not expect
what happened in the U.S. to happen in a federal election in Canada,” said chief electoral officer Stéphane Perrault.
FRED CHARTRAND / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES “All parties see the need to have vote by mail, they understand that we have controls in place ... People should not expect what happened in the U.S. to happen in a federal election in Canada,” said chief electoral officer Stéphane Perrault.

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