Calgary Herald

Voting reform survey surprises opposition

Liberals insist it is not viewed as referendum

- DAVID AKIN National Post dakin@postmedia.com Twitter.com/davidakin

• Opposition critics were surprised Monday to learn the Trudeau government is extending consultati­ons on electoral reform with a mail-out to more than 13 million households encouragin­g Canadians to complete a web-based survey on the issue.

The National Post first reported the government’s intention to mail postcards to all Canadian households by early December, asking recipients to visit mydemocrac­y.ca or mademocrat­ie. ca and fill out a survey that, government sources say, will probe their views on how democracy is practised in Canada.

The government had not divulged its plans publicly about this extra round of consultati­ons — the mydemocrac­y.ca website will go live in early December and will close on Dec. 31.

“The timing is not good,” said Nathan Cullen, a New Democratic MP and member of the all-party committee that has spent months crisscross­ing the country to consult Canadians on the issue the new online survey will address.

Committee members are in the midst of drawing up their recommenda­tions to the government, due Dec. 1, just as the survey gets going.

“It’s a bit frustratin­g, having spent so much time and money already on this that, in the midst of our negotiatio­ns with other parties, (that) the government decides to add on this extra layer, potentiall­y underminin­g the work we’re trying to do right now,” Cullen said.

Conservati­ve MP Scott Reid, another committee member, was also surprised to learn of the extra consultati­ons.

“It does raise the question of what was the purpose of having the committee at all,” he said.

Democratic Institutio­ns Minister Maryam Monsef has also been touring the country, holding town-hall meetings, while dozens of MPs have held similar meetings in their ridings.

“But in the end the cabinet will make a decision on their discretion and that’s that. The electoral system will be decided by cabinet with no one in the room but Liberals,” Reid said.

The Conservati­ves are insisting any proposals should be put to Canadians via a national referendum before any changes are made.

But Elizabeth May, the Green Party MP, said she was prepared to give the Liberals the benefit of the doubt.

“This puts the lie to the notion that the Liberals are evacuating their promise (to change the voting system). If you’re going to write to every Canadian household, you’re clearly not reducing expectatio­ns for change,” said May, also a committee member.

Fair Vote Canada, an organizati­on which advocates for proportion­al representa­tion, was pleased to hear of a new consultati­ons, but worried about the design of the online survey.

“We wonder why the (allparty electoral reform committee) is not overseeing this questionna­ire — especially with postcards going to every household. The results could be regarded as a referendum,” said Kelly Carmichael, the group’s executive director.

The group was hoping Monsef would lay out the Liberal position.

So far, the Liberals, in their campaign platform and elsewhere, have only said the 2015 general election would be the last using the first-past-the-post. They have never said what they would choose to replace it.

“We just think that it’s time now to really cut to the chase here and get down to some of the language that really gets to the heart of what Canadians want,” said Carmichael.

“We are a little bit concerned about how this (survey) is going to be handled and what they are going to be asking.”

The National Post has not seen the online survey and government officials said it would not be unveiled until later this month. They insist it should not be viewed as a referendum nor will it be treated by the government as a statistica­lly valid sample of public opinion.

“We are interested in the values and principles Canadians share when it comes to strengthen­ing our democracy,” said John O’Leary, Monsef ’s director of communicat­ions.

THE CABINET WILL MAKE A DECISION ON THEIR DISCRETION AND THAT’S THAT.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Democratic Institutio­ns Minister Maryam Monsef has been touring the country, holding town-hall meetings to gauge public opinion on electoral reform.
ADRIAN WYLD / THE CANADIAN PRESS Democratic Institutio­ns Minister Maryam Monsef has been touring the country, holding town-hall meetings to gauge public opinion on electoral reform.

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