National Post

Mail-in voting could hurt Liberals

‘Complicate­d’ process may deter voters

- David Ljunggren

OTTAWA • Mail-in voting is set to soar ahead of the Sept. 20 election amid fears of COVID-19, and the complex registrati­on process could deter voters, possibly underminin­g Justin Trudeau’s bid for a majority Liberal government.

Pollsters say mainly Liberal and left-leaning voters would like to use mail-in balloting, while Conservati­ves prefer to vote in person. But Liberal strategist­s are concerned the sign-up process for casting ballots by mail could discourage their supporters from using it and lead them to not vote at all.

Trudeau launched the campaign on Sunday, hoping that high vaccinatio­n rates and a post-pandemic economic rebound would help him rebuff a challenge from the opposition Conservati­ves and regain the parliament­ary majority he lost two years ago.

Part of the problem is there is no substantiv­e history of voting by mail during Canadian federal elections. Of the 18.4 million people who cast their ballots in the 2019 election, just under 50,000 chose mail, and most were abroad.

But concern over COVID-19 means anywhere from four million to five million people out of 27 million potential voters could choose the mail this time, says Elections Canada.

Some 71 per cent of the country’s eligible population is fully vaccinated, but cases are creeping higher — mostly among the unvaccinat­ed — in a fourth wave being driven by the Delta variant.

People who want to vote by mail must ask Elections Canada for a special ballot and provide proof of identity, either by applying online and sending a digital scan of documents, or by mail by with photocopie­s of identifica­tion.

“It is true that voting by mail demands an effort on the part of the elector,” Deputy Chief Electoral Officer Michel Roussel said in an interview. “We will insist, the moment the election is called, that if you plan to vote by mail, start now, because it is complicate­d.”

To better inform voters how to vote by mail, Elections Canada plans an advertisin­g blitz once the campaign starts, using the web, radio and television as well as social media channels.

But two Liberal sources who said they could not speak on the record said they feared that elderly voters — who tend to vote more than other age cohorts — would be put off by the applicatio­n process while the fear of COVID-19 might keep them from voting in person.

“Support for mail-in is higher among New Democrats and Liberals and least popular among Conservati­ves,” said EKOS Research pollster Frank Graves, who said some 20 per cent of mostly left-leaning voters want to vote by mail.

“If mail-in is more difficult than people would like, it would be least damaging to the Conservati­ves, because it’s not something they’re planning on using much anyway.”

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