Ottawa Citizen

New rules for federal leaders’ debates

- KRISTY KIRKUP AND JOAN BRYDEN

OTTAWA • An independen­t commission will organize federal leaders’ debates for the next election to take the planning out of backrooms where political parties try to design the debates for their own advantage, Democratic Institutio­ns Minister Karina Gould announced Tuesday.

The plan went over like a lead balloon with the Official Opposition, who say it’s evidence of election rigging.

The commission will organize two leaders’ debates for the 2019 election — one in each official language — and will ensure discussion­s are accessible to all Canadians on various communicat­ion platforms, Gould said outside the House of Commons.

“What this whole thing is about is ensuring that this is done in a public, transparen­t way and to ensure that the public interest is at the centre, and not partisan interest,” Gould said.

The government has nominated former governor general David Johnston to lead the commission, she added. He is to appear before a Commons committee to speak with MPs about the work.

“I hope they (MPs) engage in good faith and have a productive conversati­on with him because I think as most Canadians will agree, he is absolutely an impartial, independen­t individual who has the best interest of Canadians at heart,” she said.

However, Conservati­ve democratic institutio­ns critic Stephanie Kusie said Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is trying to control the debate process and ensure it is set up in the “best way possible to support the government.”

She pointed to the number of debates, just two, and format as evidence to support this case.

“Essentiall­y what this is doing, this is silencing Canadians,” she said.

The commission will have to report to Parliament following the 2019 debates with recommenda­tions for a permanent commission, Gould said. In the United States, debates among presidenti­al candidates are organized by a commission with members from both the Republican and Democratic parties.

NDP democratic reform critic Nathan Cullen also had questions, noting a House of Commons committee recommende­d the commission­er be selected by all registered parties.

He also raised questions about the $5.5-million budget, noting he would like to see a breakdown. Debates just aren’t that expensive, he said.

“It’s podiums,” he said. “It’s glasses of water.”

During the 2015 election campaign Trudeau promised to create an arm’s-length body to organize future leaders’ debates.

Until that election, Canadian voters had traditiona­lly had at least two opportunit­ies during the campaign to assess party leaders in televised debates — one in French, one in English — organized by a consortium of broadcaste­rs.

Also on Tuesday, the House of Commons passed Bill C-76, legislatio­n aimed at making it easier for Canadians to vote and harder for foreign entities to interfere in federal elections.

The omnibus bill would reverse a number of changes wrought by the previous Conservati­ve government’s widely denounced Fair Elections Act, including restoring the use of voter informatio­n cards as a valid form of identifica­tion at polling places and the use of vouching for those without ID.

It would also limit spending by political parties and advocacy groups during the three-month period before an election is officially called and ban third parties from ever using foreign funds for political campaigns.

The bill also includes an attempt to keep 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.

 ??  ?? Karina Gould
Karina Gould

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