National Post (National Edition)

Leaders’ debates need revamp, report says

2019 FEDERAL VOTE

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OTTAWA • A review of the 2019 federal election leaders’ debates says the commission organizing them should be separated more fully from government and that the standards for participat­ion should be reworked to avoid a potential repeat of the fracas around who got into last fall’s face-offs.

The final report of the 2019 Leaders’ Debates Commission was released Monday, with 11 recommenda­tions for future debates, based on the two held in 2019.

The recommenda­tions include the creation of a permanent and publicly funded commission tasked with organizing two debates per election. The head of the commission ought to be selected with input from all political parties, not just the government, the report says.

The government should also play no role in setting the participat­ion criteria, the report says. The commission ought to do that, and also have the final say on the debates’ format and production.

“Not only do debates count, they are a pivotal moment in an election campaign,” debates commission­er David Johnston, the former governor general, wrote in the report.

“They need to happen in every election, and they need to ensure that the public interest is paramount. They help us understand that democracy matters.”

National English and French debates have traditiona­lly been organized by a consortium of TV networks, but in the 2015 campaign, then-prime minister Stephen Harper refused to participat­e in the English event, and subsequent­ly then-NDP leader Tom Mulcair did as well.

Other organizati­ons stepped into the void to set up their own events but it led to uneven participat­ion by leaders.

The Liberal government subsequent­ly set up the debates commission in a bid to ensure what it said would be a more predictabl­e, reliable and stable approach to a necessary element of federal election campaigns.

The commission’s report says a goal was also to have more transparen­cy in the way debates were organized and who got to participat­e.

For 2019, however, the commission didn’t set the participat­ion criteria. They were included in the order the Liberal government used to create the commission in 2018.

In reviewing the 2019 debates, the commission said it heard repeated criticism that that approach created a perception of a conflict of interest, and also that some of the criteria set in 2019 were ambiguous, in particular, a clause requiring the commission to determine whether candidates of a party had a “legitimate chance” of getting elected before extending an invitation to its leader to debate.

The result was a protracted argument over whether Maxime Bernier, the former Conservati­ve MP who created his own splinter party ahead of the last election, ought to have a spot on the stage. At the time, he had no elected MPs under the People’s Party of Canada banner, only himself, after having been elected as a Conservati­ve.

He was ultimately included in the debates — the commission did its own polling of his fortunes, among other things.

The report concluded that the commission needs to set the criteria and consider making them clearer.

“The determinat­ion of debate participat­ion criteria should not rest with the government of the day,” the report says.

Michael Chong, the Conservati­ves’ democratic institutio­ns critic, said in theory, the commission was a good idea but it had significan­t flaws. “It’s tainted. It’s far too close to the Liberal government,” Chong said. “They should scrap it and start over.”

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