National Post

Court challenge to voting law

- STEPHEN MAHER

Last year, when the Conservati­ves were pushing the Fair Elections Act through Parliament, Conservati­ve MP Brad Butt stood up — twice — to claim he had seen voter informatio­n cards being stolen.

“I am from a semi-urban area of Mississaug­a, where there are many highrise apartment buildings,” he said.

“On mail delivery day, when the voter cards are delivered to community mailboxes in apartment buildings, many of them are discarded in the garbage can or the blue box. I have actually witnessed other people picking up the voter cards, going to the campaign office of whatever candidate they support and handing out these voter cards to other individual­s, who then walk into voting stations with friends who vouch for them with no ID.”

Stephen Best, who lives in Butt’s riding, thought the story was weird. If Butt saw

people stealing voter cards, why didn’t he report it?

He contacted Elections Canada, and the agency checked Butt’s bogus claims. Two weeks later, the Tory MP stood up in the Commons to say he had made up his story.

“I made a statement in the House during the debate that is not accurate, and I just want to reflect the fact that I have not personally witnessed individual­s retrieving voter notificati­on cards from the garbage cans or from the mailbox areas of apartment buildings,” he said.

Many people are going to be prevented from voting in October to prevent the kind of thing that Butt didn’t see.

The Fair Elections Act prevents voters from using voter cards as identifica­tion. People with up-to-date driver’s licences are fine, but nearly four million Canadians don’t have those. To vote, they will have to show ID that proves who they are and where they live.

Since a lot of them won’t know that, this election could be a mess, especially if party

workers make full use of their right to examine voters’ ID,

another new measure in the Fair Elections Act.

The ID requiremen­ts will be toughest for people who have recently moved, seniors in nursing homes, aboriginal­s and students, many of whom will have recently moved.

It sure looks like the Conservati­ves would be just as happy if many students and aboriginal­s don’t get their paperwork organized, because they tend to vote for other parties.

This all appears to have been inspired by American laws that make it harder for poor people to vote, ostensibly to prevent voter fraud.

On Thursday, lawyer Steven Shrybman will ask a Toronto judge to issue an emergency injunction to allow the use of voter cards as identifica­tion this October. If he succeeds, Elections Canada would still have time to reprint the cards.

Shrybman, representi­ng the Council of Canadians and the Canadian Federation of Students, will argue the Fair Elections Act violates the Charter right to vote, because tens of thousands of voters will be unable to prove their identity and address on election day.

His case depends on evidence from election expert Harry Neufeld, who says that after many years of looking for voter fraud, he has failed to find it. In the rare cases where people do vote twice, they do so because of mental disability or intoxicati­on.

Justice Department lawyers argue it’s up to MPs, not judges, to decide what ID is required. And anyone without ID can just acquire a letter of confirmati­on of residence.

They say safeguards are needed to protect the integrity of the electoral system, but in their 51-page affidavit, they are able to point to only two fraudulent votes, both cast by pranksters from Quebec TV show Infoman, who spoiled their ballots in 2011.

Luckily for the Conservati­ves, the judge may rule based on the threshold necessary to overturn a potentiall­y unconstitu­tional law before there is time for a full airing of evidence rather than the merits of the law.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada