Ottawa Citizen

Pre-election ad loophole spurs spending

Limits don't apply without fixed voting day

- MIA RABSON

OTTAWA • Canadian party leaders worked their way around the country this week, in what some see as a sure sign the pandemic is near its end, but also as proof that a federal election is on its way.

But with the fixed-election date still more than two years away, does a pre-election campaign that looks like a pre-election campaign and smells like a pre-election campaign, actually qualify as a pre-election campaign?

Not according to Canada's newest election law.

The Election Modernizat­ion Act of 2018 would normally mean politician­s can glad-hand — or elbow, in pandemic times — to their hearts' content in the summer before an election. But they can only spend a limited amount on advertisin­g. This year, that act does not apply.

That's because by the fixed-election date law, Canada's next federal election isn't supposed to be held until October 2023. But a minority Parliament like this one, where the governing Liberals are outnumbere­d in the House of Commons by opposition MPs, can fall. Or, a prime minister can head to Rideau Hall and ask for an earlier election.

Lori Turnbull, the director of the school of public administra­tion at Dalhousie University, said the Election Modernizat­ion Act that set the pre-election period advertisin­g limits only applies to the summer months before a fixed-election date, not when an election happens earlier.

That loophole might be having an effect. The Conservati­ves spent millions advertisin­g in May and June of 2019, including during the costly air waves of the NBA playoffs, when the Toronto Raptors made their historic run to win the Larry O'Brien Championsh­ip Trophy.

The Conservati­ves said they made those buys knowing they had money to spend that they couldn't put toward advertisin­g in July or August of that year, as the election was set for Oct. 21.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has not fallen for multiple attempts by reporters to bait him into saying an election is coming. The more than $6 billion he announced over the last week for light rail projects, child care, and climate action? It's all just “something we've been talking about and working on for a long time,” he said Wednesday when asked if this was a pre-election tour.

Turnbull says there are no rules preventing leaders from campaignin­g before a campaign, and she added, there probably shouldn't be.

“To me, it's clear now this is gearing up for an election and this is exactly what we would expect from campaign-style behaviour and pre-campaign behaviour,” said Turnbull. “I don't think we can start to outlaw prime ministers and political leaders being political.”

Trudeau's four-province trip was the first domestic tour he has taken in months. His ministers were also out and about, sometimes with him, sometimes on their own, with their own promises in tow.

His spokesman said the trip is a government tour, and didn't include any Liberal party events.

Trudeau's opponents did not leave the field to him alone.

Conservati­ve Erin O'Toole was in Calgary for a series of official events, and some party fundraiser­s. The latter was covered by party funds, but the trip overall was “in his capacity as the leader of the official Opposition,” said his spokeswoma­n Chelsea Tucker.

She said O'Toole is “meeting with stakeholde­rs to hear their concerns, how they have been impacted and share his vision of securing the future for all Canadians in every region, flowing through the parliament­ary budget.”

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh is in the midst of a multi-day tour in British Columbia, first in the Vancouver area and then on Vancouver Island.

Bloc Quebecois Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet spent the week touring Quebec's Cote-Nord region, meeting with mayors and staging photo ops with MPs.

THIS IS EXACTLY WHAT WE WOULD EXPECT FROM CAMPAIGNST­YLE BEHAVIOUR.

 ?? JENNIFER GAUTHIER / REUTERS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau greets people at Town Centre Park in Coquitlam, B.C., last week in what appears to be pre-election campaignin­g.
JENNIFER GAUTHIER / REUTERS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau greets people at Town Centre Park in Coquitlam, B.C., last week in what appears to be pre-election campaignin­g.

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