Waterloo Region Record

Expats fret bill allowing them to vote is dying

- Colin Perkel

TORONTO — Disenfranc­hised expat Canadians are questionin­g whether the Liberal government is deliberate­ly allowing legislatio­n aimed at restoring their voting rights to wither on the vine.

The concern comes as the country’s top court set a new date for hearing their constituti­onal battle against provisions that strip Canadians abroad for more than five years from voting in federal elections.

The Supreme Court of Canada agreed just ahead of a scheduled hearing in February to a government request for an adjournmen­t given the introducti­on of Bill C-33 in late November.

Among other things, the bill would allow all Canadians abroad to vote — including as many as 1.4 million expatriate­s now excluded.

“This was a fantastic move on their part. They were upholding their campaign promises,” said Gill Frank, one of two expatriate­s spearheadi­ng the constituti­onal battle. “Nothing has happened since.”

In asking the Supreme Court for the adjournmen­t, the government had said the extra time would allow Parliament to “debate and consider” the proposed legislatio­n. However, since its introducti­on and with the clock ticking down on both the court hearing now set for March 2018 and a federal election slated for 2019, there has been little progress on the bill.

Frank’s lawyer, Shaun O’Brien, questioned the government’s motives.

“The bill was introduced just in time to ensure that they could seek an adjournmen­t of the hearing, and then they seem to have done nothing about it,” O’Brien said. “We’re assuming now the bill is going to die.”

A spokespers­on for Democratic Institutio­ns Minister Karina Gould, who took over the file in January, did not explain why the bill has not progressed beyond its introducti­on. However, Byrne Furlong did say Gould was committed to the legislatio­n and its passage.

“Bill C-33 is a priority for our government and we are looking forward to debating the legislatio­n in Parliament,” Furlong said on Wednesday.

New Democrat critic Nathan Cullen said Furlong’s words should raise red flags.

“If this is what they consider a priority, I hate to see what they think as non-priority,” Cullen said. “There’s a large number of expat Canadians who have been given what I think are false assurances about the government’s determinat­ion to change this.”

Cullen said he was puzzled by the government’s behaviour, noting the Commons is scrambling to pass legislatio­n before the summer hiatus, but that this bill has all but disappeare­d.

If the Liberals opt to formally end the legislativ­e session over the summer, the legislatio­n will die.

The government’s inaction on C-33 is part of a wider issue, Cullen said. Earlier this year, Trudeau broke a key campaign promise by abandoning electoral reform of the first-past-the-post voting system.

“If you start to look at the whole issue of voting and democratic rights, this government has had a huge problem,” Cullen said.

In 2014, a Superior Court justice sided with Frank and fellow expat Jamie Duong, who both live in the U.S., that parts of the Canada Elections Act are unconstitu­tional. In a split decision, Ontario’s Court of Appeal reversed that ruling, paving the way for the Supreme Court showdown.

Frank said he hoped the government would still move on the bill, but said he wanted the top court to weigh in regardless.

“I really do hope that we get our hearing before the Supreme Court,” Frank said. “This should be adjudicate­d and decided so that no future government can take away our rights.”

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