:
That's great. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
This motion, which I gave notice of, I'd now like to table and move:
That the Committee present a report to the House of Commons recommending that Bill C-23, An Act to amend the Canada Elections Act and other Acts and to make consequential amendments to certain Acts, be withdrawn.
The idea behind this is that the official opposition would like us to start fresh, albeit benefiting from the process that's occurred to date, which has had all kinds of learning elements in it. This is where we probably should have started with the bill in the House, given the nature of the Canada Elections Act, where much more extensive preparation, engagement with knowledgeable stakeholders from commissioners of Canada elections to chief electoral officers, and so on, should have occurred, not to mention a much more collegial, extensive process with the other parties in Parliament.
The government has backed down on a number of very important areas that have been resisted by the official opposition, by civil society, and I do suspect by Conservative MPs. With the amendments the government's been forced to agree to, this bill will be better than Bill , that is, the unfair elections act, as tabled by the minister, but it will be still much worse than leaving the current Canada Elections Act in place.
An hon. member: Hear, hear!
Mr. Craig Scott: Make no mistake, Mr. Chair, democratic resistance did prevail in major ways over the last two months. Frankly, and I'm not speaking to my colleagues across the way who are sitting as colleague MPs—they are not in cabinet, they are not the minister—would the government have announced that it was doing the about-face in several areas that it announced on Friday without the tenacious, all-hands-on-deck opposition coming from the NDP and from the leader of the official opposition? Would it have done so without an amazing outpouring of civil society protest? Would it have done so without scholars and editorial boards speaking out with reasoned arguments that endorsed the NDP's arguments in the House, and in our cross-country hearings that this committee would not endorse, that we had to do on our own, and without over 70 witnesses coming almost to a person to take this bill apart bit by bit?
Frankly, and here I do want to thank my colleagues, many of whom remain nameless even to me, and without Conservative MPs' responding to the effort started by the official opposition that created so much pressure, plus the persuasive efforts with MPs across the way.... Some of it went on throughout the testimony, and I'm not saying that this was not listened to by my colleagues, some of it was, but many other backbenchers weighed in. I know this. Without all this, there's no way the government would have backed down on a single item, I am convinced, given their “our way or the highway” approach.
We have had 10 hours of amendment discussion, clause-by-clause consideration, and I'd like to report, in case nobody noticed, that not a single opposition amendment, of many dozens, has been accepted to this point.
An hon. member: Shame.
Mr. Craig Scott: The “our way or the highway” has continued. For that reason alone, there is absolutely no chance of this bill being fixed anywhere near what would be needed for anybody, speaking for the official opposition, to support it. We'll get to the end of the process with many serious flaws. Voter information cards are still banned. The commissioner's power to seek a judicial order to compel testimony will not be permitted. The commissioner will have been moved to the Director of Public Prosecutions, a completely unnecessary move that also undermines the commissioner's capacity to investigate and the role he plays in the compliance structure of Elections Canada. The Chief Electoral Officer will have no access to campaign receipts from national parties. All public education and information programs will remain banned except for schools. Treasury Board will have a say on the temporary specialists, researchers, etc., that the Chief Electoral Officer can hire.
We tried. We moved to go into committee after first reading for everybody to be able to look at this bill fresh from the start. That was declined. So we have no choice but to withdraw and start afresh. With that, I move this motion to withdraw.
An hon. member: Kill the bill.
I thank my esteemed colleague for his intervention. However, I do take issue with a number of things he said. Primarily, he mentioned that in his opinion at least, there's no way the government would have changed any portion of the original bill had it not been for the public pressure.
I take issue with that, because from the outset, even though our government...and the minister responsible for this bill said he thought it was a very good bill, he also said that if there were useful suggestions that came out of committee, he would certainly listen and entertain amendments based on that testimony, and that's exactly what has happened. We have introduced approximately 45 amendments based on the testimony we've heard. I think that's a good thing. I think that certainly illustrates that the government is listening.
With respect, however, to the overarching motion and the request to withdraw this bill, clearly that's an implication, or at least a direct inference, that the bill is not worthy in its current state or as amended in that process we're going through now. I take great issue with that, because I would argue that Canadians think this is a pretty good bill. I'll buttress that statement with a few facts, or at least a few pieces of information, for the benefit of all those who are perhaps watching.
The two most contentious issues that we have heard from witnesses and from members of the opposition with respect to this bill have been identification requirements and vouching. Yesterday I mentioned to members of this committee that in the most recent Ipsos Reid poll, it showed that 87%...or at least I stated that the Ipsos Reid poll demonstrated that 87% of Canadians felt it appropriate that before being allowed to vote, Canadians show identification.
In a subsequent intervention, Mr. Scott, on behalf of the opposition, said I was mis-characterizing that poll, because the exact wording said that 87% of Canadians felt it appropriate that Canadians prove their identity and their residence. The direct implication there was that you don't need ID to prove who you are and where you live. I can only suppose that this means he felt that vouching would be a form of proof. What he failed to inform the committee, however, was that in that very poll, at a later point in the poll, it showed that 70% Canadians disagreed with the concept of vouching.
So if you want to connect the dots, if you have 87% of Canadians feeling that you need to prove your identification and residence, and 70% didn't want that to happen via vouching, what's left? What's left is what we've been advocating from day one: you have to prove your identity through proper ID presented at the time of voting. That's exactly what Canadians feel.
I would also point out that also included in the poll is a breakdown by political support. It found that 66% of people who consider themselves to be supporters of the NDP felt that vouching should be eliminated. So not only in the court of public opinion does the general public disagree with the NDP position on vouching; their own members disagree. Their supporters disagree with the NDP position on vouching.
That's why I continue to say that in the court of public opinion, we are on the right side, and in this argument the NDP has lost badly in the court of public opinion. Canadians expect voters to present ID. They don't like the concept of vouching.
The best analogy I've heard comes from one of my colleagues, so I have to attribute this to him, the . He put out a piece to his constituents on the concept of vouching. The analogy he gave was this. Let's say two guys walk into a bar. One clearly looks middle-aged and the other one looks much younger. The bartender comes up and says to the younger-looking gentleman, “I'm going to have to see your identification.” The older gentleman says, “That's not necessary, bartender. I'm going to vouch for him.”
Would that be acceptable to anyone? Of course not. It's not acceptable to the laws of the Province of Ontario or any other laws in any other province that have usually the age of 18 required. That's because Canadians expect people to show proper identification in order to do just about anything these days.
Both on the question of identification requirements and on the question of vouching, we believe we've addressed the views of Canadians very appropriately in this bill, and on many other issues where we heard dissenting views from either Canadians or those who chose to join us as intervenors in this committee, we have listened and responded. I think the amended version of Bill will be a bill that does what it is intended to do: improve the Canada Elections Act.
Again, I notice with great interest my colleagues opposite have not mentioned many other attributes of the bill that were lauded, approved, and applauded by people who came before this committee. Coming in with a robocalls registry, for an example, to stop fraudulent robocalls, was very well received. They talk about the movement of the Commissioner of Canada Elections from Elections Canada to the DPP. Yes, the opposition disagreed with that, and yes, there was some disagreement, but quite frankly it does make the Commissioner of Canada Elections far more independent. Even Sheila Fraser said she would not have a problem with that as long as there was adequate and full communication between Elections Canada and the commissioner. One of these amendments ensures that this will happen.
Without taking too much extra time—and I thank my colleague Mr. Scott for being brief and succinct in his comments, and I'll try to do the same—I think the final, amended package, which we are dealing with today, is a good piece of legislation supported by the vast majority of Canadians. We're very proud as a government to be able to present that to Canadians.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Two guys walk into a bar, and the older one says, “You know, this younger guy here may not have ID, but I can vouch for him”, and the bartender says, “I'm sorry, pal, but this isn't the Constitution we're talking about, and we're not voting”.
Voting is an inalienable right, as enshrined in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. That's what this is about. This is why the institution of vouching exists, not only in this country but in many modern democracies that do not want to disenfranchise someone.
I'll give you an example. Professor Louis Massicotte sent this along. In a recent The Australian newspaper column, Dennis Shanahan, who writes for the Murdoch papers, said the following:
Canada’s Conservative government, embroiled in a furor after disenfranchising 120,000 voters by changing identification standards, has demonstrated the way not to go about important electoral reform.
Australia’s changes should be driven by parliament’s multi-party Joint Standing Committee on Electoral Matters.
What a refreshing idea.
As my leader, , said on the subject of withdrawing—and he has a valid point—the process by which this was done was so egregious towards democracy that we need to step back and think, if we ever do this again, about how it should be done. Obviously, without the numbers, we can't withdraw this bill, but I will say this. Every time they bring up polls, and every time they bring up testimony, during which they say people spoke wonderfully, glowingly about this bill, I think that's somewhat overemphasizing the positive aspects of it, which as has been displayed, we voted in favour of in certain circumstances. But when they bring up polls, and they bring that up, it's almost as though they did it on a gamble, really, because now they're saying that if they had gone through the process of setting up a multi-party system or a multi-party committee or consultations that started with the very people who run our elections every four years, they would have lots of evidence to say the government is doing the right thing.
I would love to find out what was brought to the Conservative caucus way back when that made the former Minister of Democratic Reform turn back and start all over again. I would love to know what was in that, compared to what is in this.
We do talk about how it was a climb-down and that sort of thing. I'll even give them credit by saying that they listened on some varied aspects of vouching, and to a small degree, they've restored vouching. It's at a level that is not good enough, but it's a positive step. It's not just with us here inside this bubble we call Ottawa, but it's out there in the communities and people are talking about it.
We also have to give credit to the Senate study, the pre-study, and to some of the senators—both Conservative and independent. When you look at what they said, they made some very valid points.
I'll give you another example. Preston Manning was here and he gave very good evidence about what should be done about taking the shackles off the CEO. As we've discovered, it wasn't quite followed the way Preston Manning would have liked. They did make a positive step, but still the CEO is far more legislated and put into a box than is really necessary.
I'll end with this. In many respects, so many clauses and so much angst that you see coming from this side of the house—which I think is legitimate—goes to an expression that's been brought up time and time again. A lot of the measures in this bill were solutions to problems that never existed.
:
This was introduced late last evening. It would add a provision 149.1 to Canada's Election Act saying:
The Chief Electoral Officer shall ensure that the notice of confirmation of registration that is sent under section 95 or 102 is marked with a prominent message informing the elector that this notice of confirmation of registration may not be used as a piece of identification for the purposes of voting.
As bizarre as it may seem, the official opposition lost all of its amendments that attempted to bring back the ability of the Chief Electoral Officer to authorize voter information cards to be used as a second piece of ID alongside another piece of ID to show an address prominently.
What we're left with now is a situation where almost one million people were authorized to use them in 2011. A good chunk, some estimate over 400,000, actually did use them, and without vigorous efforts on the part of Elections Canada not just to do what the government wants, which is to tell people what they need to vote with, they should be told what they cannot vote with.
There will be chaos in some polls and in some areas for people showing up with their VICs assuming, like in 2011, they could use it. This is an effort to basically help avoid chaos by instructing the Chief Electoral Officer to prominently say, on the voter information card, that this card cannot be used.
I think it might have been Mr. Simms who asked Mr. Richards here last night whether the advertising of information feature on the government's amendment would permit the Chief Electoral Officer to message Canadians what they could not use. We had an answer that was, I think, maybe the best Mr. Richards could come up with on the spot. He wanted to stick to the text and the text simply says that you're allowed to advertise what you can use not what you cannot use.
I just hope that there is no doubt that surely the Chief Electoral Officer can advertise generally, and not just on this card, that this card cannot be used by virtue of the decision to ban the Chief Electoral Officer from authorizing this in the future.
That's my motion to add 149.1.
:
Mr. Chair, let me start by saying that I think this will be a necessary thing to do. Several of us spoke about the importance of the VIC, the voter information card, and how people use that. Yesterday I compared it to an airplane boarding pass. It's their ticket to democracy. To some people that may seem absurd, but quite frankly, to a lot of people, and I mean a lot of seniors right now, this is their ticket. They feature it prominently in their homes in the writ period to make sure it is there for when they go to vote, and they do it so proudly.
But see, this is the good part about clause-by-clause. You can have a discussion, and in the midst of that discussion you can change the way you're thinking, or bend to other people's logic. Yesterday I said I thought this should be in legislation, but then I thought, well, you know, maybe this is overly prescriptive for Elections Canada. I would just like to see them do that as a good practice, so maybe it shouldn't be in legislation.
But given what I just heard from Mr. Scott, I think he's right. This is very important to do. It may seem overly prescriptive, but I think it's a necessary move that we can make. We did talk about the shackles being put on the CEO. If we can at least take a portion of those shackles off by putting something in legislation that will inform voters that they can't use that card anymore, that will save them a lot of time and effort. It may even save their vote.
Thank you.
I certainly agree with the idea that there is merit in making it clear that the voter information card is not a piece of identification for the purposes of voting, but I don't think it's necessary to say it in the legislation. The reason I say this is that we did a little search last night, and we were able to find a copy of a voter information card. It actually says that on the voter information card already.
In fact, I have an illustration of one right now for the federal Canadian election of Monday, January 23, 2006. This is not the most recent one, but the point is that it's existed in the past without the need for a legislative requirement.
The card says: “If your name and address appear on this card, you are registered to vote. Keep this card. It will give you quicker access to your polling station.” Then below that—all in caps, I might add—it says, “This is not an identification document.”
In my opinion, there is no necessity for legislation. It already exists. I would just encourage the Chief Electoral Officer to return to the practice he had used in 2006. He may have used it in other elections subsequently; I don't know. The card I have at my disposal is the one from 2006.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I think the government made our point by virtue of the fact that even they had to go back to research a voter information card, retrieve it, look at it, and discover for themselves that it's on there. The fact is that none of us knew it was on there. We have all had them in our hands at one time or another, we've been talking about them for weeks, and none of us—none of our staff, nobody—knew it was already on there. Doesn't it make a lot of sense that we emphasize, by the passing of this motion, that it be a prominent message? That's the operative word, “prominent”. It's obviously not prominent.
This is harm reduction. We have run up the white flag concerning the voter information card and the way the government is neutralizing its effectiveness. We accept that; we can count. This is, as my colleague Mr. Scott has said, harm reduction.
My colleague also said that there is no downside. The only thing I might add is that from the government perspective there could be a downside, because if that message is displayed prominently, more people may become aware that the card is not ID. Therefore, there is a possibility or greater likelihood that they may take appropriate ID with them or grab their driver's licence and then be able to vote. That's what they don't want. Let's remember that the goal of the government in this exercise is to have fewer and fewer Canadians vote in the election. There is nothing they have done—with the exception of a couple of minor things, but on the significant factors, there is nothing they have done—that is meant to encourage, facilitate, and result in more Canadians voting. It is the opposite.
We see this in the United States. The Republicans are doing the same thing, especially around ID. People are following that issue. It has been challenged all the way to their Supreme Court. This is the same game. It has a little nicer, fuzzier, Canadian look to it, in that it may not be as stark, but make no mistake. The goal is the same: voter suppression—fewer people voting.
The downside for the government of putting this information in prominently is that more people may make sure when they walk out the door that they have some other piece of ID and actually will go to the voting station and will vote. The government is hoping.... This is where we didn't get a chance to get into the minutiae.
We talked about it a bit last night. At 10 o'clock or 11 o'clock at night, who is paying attention? That wasn't by accident, either. We talked about—
Pardon me?
The Chair: I was paying attention.
Mr. David Christopherson: Yes, Chair, you've been paying riveting attention, I know, and there's a test after, too.
What we found out last night, again through the fantastic analysis and work of my colleague Professor Scott, is that scrutineers now will be given the clear authority to look at ID. If you want to do so, you can use that power to slow things down. When you're into the game of voter suppression, chaos in the voting station is your friend, long lineups are your friend, people who don't have ID are your friend. That's the name of the game.
What we are saying is that at least on this one, if nothing else, we're either going to make an improvement or leave a stark example, for anybody who is listening and watching, that clearly they don't want people to vote. Otherwise, why on earth would they disagree?
The best argument we've heard so far from the government is that the information is already there. But as I said, none of us knew it was there. You can't find it. The operative word in the motion is “prominent”. The whole idea is that it would be prominent, in the hope that more people will realize that, although it makes no bloody sense, their voter information card is not the ID they need to bring to the voting station—even though common sense as well as facts would dictate that this is the way it should be.
So at the very least, let's let Canadians know the absurdity, so that they know that grabbing that card and heading out the door to vote is not going to do it, even though common sense says it should, especially when they arrive at the voting station and look down and see their name on the voter list, as it is on the card. But if they don't have that other ID, which didn't used to be there before, they won't be able to vote.
This is an attempt to try to salvage something out of this, to prevent some of the chaos, Chair. Again, this is to prominently put on the card that this is not ID for voting. That's all it is. If they vote against that, how could there be any defence to the allegation that this is voter suppression? It has been from the beginning, it continues to be. The only reason they're blinking now is that there's been so much pressure from Canadians, experts, international experts, and to their credit, the media, who have uniformly been opposed.
With all of that, we're down to this moment. If they won't even vote for this, then the last bit of the fig leaf, as ugly as that image is, is gone, and we know, and Canadians know, that this is all about trying to get the fix in for the Conservatives in every way they can and that voter suppression is alive and well in the Government of Canada.
Thanks, Chair.
:
Mr. Chair, I won't dwell on this at length, but I just have to say how profoundly offended I am by the literally unbelievable assertions that have been made by my colleague, who I'm sure, upon reflection, will regret that he has said what he has said.
His accusation, if we are to take it seriously, is that the government is seeking to systematically, on the basis of age, race, income level, and perhaps some other factors I couldn't keep track of, deny the vote to Canadians, an assertion that, if true, would mean that literally every member of the government, certainly every person sitting at this table, would be unfit to be in the public square, to serve in public office, frankly to participate in debate.
If that's what we did, if we were the systematic bigots who participated in deliberate, aggressive voter suppression, on that basis, we would be unfit for public life. I would be ashamed to be with anyone who actually acted that way. Frankly, if I were like that, people should be ashamed to be with me.
But of course this is complete fiction. If there were one iota of truth to it, in a country that is as sensitive as Canada and as Canadians are to this kind of grotesquerie, this kind of unacceptable attitude, there would be revolution out there. But there is no revolution out there at all.
Despite the histrionics of his party, indeed we see that on things like the vouching principle, a vast majority of Canadians support our position on this. They would not support, and they never have supported, any measure that hints at or smacks of in the slightest way any of the kind of racist, bigoted actions that he suggests are at the foundation of this government's approach.
Frankly, I'm a little bit ashamed to be sitting opposite him. I never thought I would say that, but listening to this, I'm actually genuinely offended.
Mr. David Christopherson: I kind of feel the same way.
Mr. Scott Reid: Under the circumstances, Mr. Christopherson, I have to say that's actually a bit of a relief.
With regard to the specific amendment that we're discussing, the fact is that the voter information card contained until recently a message, in all capital letters, that stated that this was not identification. It could not be used for identification at the polls. It was prominent. It met with every iota of the description described by Professor Scott.
I make the humble suggestion that now that we've all indicated that we desire to see something like that, the Chief Electoral Officer will be capable of putting it back on. I hope he will do so. If he doesn't, I would be surprised. The point is that there's no need for a specific provision in the law to make that happen.
That's all I have to say. Thank you.
In my thought, then, are we standing down NDP-36, LIB-22, and PV-33 at the same time? Is that our best move, that we just set all these aside for a moment, while you continue to look that up?
Okay.
(Clause 53 allowed to stand)
(On clause 54)
The Chair: That leads me, then, provided it doesn't hurt at all, to G-9, because we're taking that whole package and standing it down, just for a moment, while we get the best and the most professional answers we can.
This deals with a voter coming in and being vouched for by someone in terms of their address, and we're back to the issue of “personally” again: do you know them personally?
I don't think we've heard yet how that's going to be interpreted. Is there going to be guidance provided, or are we going to have poll clerks...? Because here's the thing, if Parliament hasn't sorted out what “personally” means, then common sense would suggest that there's going to be some people, upon hearing, “Do you know this person personally, and remember if you sign this and vouch for them, and you've done something wrong, you're in serious...”. I'm just concerned that all of that would have some people going, “Wait a minute, I don't know what I'm getting into. I see the guy at the store. I know he lives in the neighbourhood. Is that personal?” What's the poll clerk going to say at that point?
Again, there's a whole grey area, and remember that all the while this interaction is going on, there are people in line waiting, and if the line is too long, they're going to go home. So part of what we're supposed to be trying to do is not only to make it easy for people to participate, we're supposed to make it efficient.
So I'm just a little concerned, Chair, and the government can respond on what their thoughts are and what we're going to do with “personally”. Have they given it any thought? Do they know how that's going to be dealt with, and is there any concern? Because as far as I know, that sort of a threatening warning hasn't been given before.
Those are my concerns, so thanks.
:
David, in all honesty, I just don't think it will be quite as complicated as you think it might be. It's just as simple as I know someone who's named David Christopherson. I may not know him well. I don't know how you define “personally” either, quite frankly, but I know you are David Christopherson. I don't need you to produce ID to me. I may not have known you well, but I know your name and I also know where you live. You may be my next-door neighbour or whatever, and that's all I'm saying, and I don't want to know where you live, frankly.
It's not meant to be complicated. It's meant to be, quite frankly, just to say, “Yes, this guy can vote, because I know he's David Christopherson; I know he lives here, so he's in a polling station; go ahead.”
Training, yes, obviously Elections Canada, when they begin their training processes, given some of the changes in the new Canada Elections Act, will probably go over that with their poll workers, but it's not meant to be complicated.
:
Yes. I'm going to be upfront that this is one of the amendments I've not had time to reflect enough on, although we got notice—I guess late Friday it was in the provisional package.
I think, in general, the idea of an audit is something we'd support. There's every reason to think that's consistent with everybody's understanding of the need to learn from each election and eliminate irregularities, etc. So I assume that's the reason.
What I'd like to focus on, however, is just to have Ms. Kim ready with one question which is, if there's any specificity to what the word “audit” means. What kind of audit would this actually entail, just by using the word “audit”? There are different kinds of audits and I'm not sure, does this mean in 338 ridings, every polling station, every DRO, every poll clerk? Does it allow sampling? I'm not sure, because that goes to costs.
Or maybe Tom knows the answer to that.
:
I don't mind the general use of the word “audit” for the exact same function. It's still auditors who are going to be asked to do it.
The reason it's important is, for one thing, we're leaving it open. The audit is generally worded, so at some level the Chief Electoral Officer, with the auditor, determines what kind of audit will achieve that purpose and then that's as much as we can ask if we don't specify more.
But I would note that it says:
the Chief Electoral Officer shall engage an auditor that he or she considers to have technical or specialized knowledge—other than a member of his or her staff or an election officer
Here is where I have two concerns. One, Elections Canada has within it a standing team of trained auditors who are on salary, as I understand it, and if they weren't enough, then you'd be adding some temporary bodies, but it would be part of sunk costs. Effectively, this is almost like it must be an external auditor to Elections Canada. This brings up huge cost questions unless I'm misinterpreting and that's why I'm wondering how extensive the audit will be and whether the costs will be there.
Second, how necessary is it for it to be an external auditor? Elections Canada is the body that regulates anything to do with the Elections Act, including precisely the provisions that we're talking about. They have the internal expertise. I'm just a bit worried that adding that in is not only unnecessary but it's another implicit provision saying that somehow or other the Chief Electoral Officer's team is not independent enough to do it.
So if you add the costs and you add the fact that they have the team, I'm not sure why it has to be external. That's my big concern.
First of all, it's interesting that it's an outside person, but here's what's sticking with me. These are my thoughts, not the reflections and wisdom of all my colleagues. This is just my view of it.
It's interesting that the government's going out of its way to ensure in a clause in the law that there is an audit or a review of issues pertaining to—guess what—its favourite subject: vouching. It just strikes me, Chair, that the government is not putting in legislation that there has to be a review and an audit to ensure that the Chief Electoral Officer did sufficient outreach and sufficient education, to review whether he did everything possible to encourage people to vote. That's not the audit. The audit isn't who was turned away at the voting station and why, to learn lessons about improving the bill to make more people vote. No, the audit part is not to look at and make sure that people's democratic rights were protected. That's not the priority here. In fact, as far as I know, that's not even in the bill.
However, its little subject matter around voter information cards—how they can't be used as ID; how it's not sure what the term “personally” means; how people are going to be told, “Boy, you'd better know that if you're signing this document and vouching for someone, this is all kind of serious”—is the only area being proposed for review. Sections 143 to 149, 161 and 162, and 169 pertain only to vouching for an address. That's the only part of the whole bill the government has said it wants to go back and examine after the election. Is it to look at and determine whether or not everything was followed and everything was done to help Canadians vote and to make sure the system works? No, the audit is in the reverse. It's on the negative. Were they allowed to vote? Who were they?
We all know from the submissions that were made which populations will be affected by the changes to vouching. I reiterate that this is just one more small part. If you add up all these parts over the days—and I don't think we're even halfway through the bill yet—we've been able to point out bit by bit.... I say to the government that there are intelligent people who follow these things, who know a lot more about law-making than we do.
My colleague is a professor. For days and days, as he was analyzing the original bill, he'd come to me and say, “Dave, I can't believe what's here. Every time I go through another clause, there's another layer”. All of that fits. That's why there was no consultation done in the beginning. This was all done probably with outside lawyers. It's all very well crafted. That's why they took so long.
I just can't help but think that this is just one more piece of this overall structure that is meant to do the opposite of what we want, in my view. If the government wants to prove that I'm not accurately reflecting its attitude, I sure would welcome amendments that show how it's going to do audits and reviews of all kinds of things that speak to people's rights.
The last point, Chair, is, once again, to point out the disrespect shown by specifying that it has to be an outside person. The government still sees the Chief Electoral Officer as an opponent. Canadians see the officers of Parliament as their friends. Again, it is not this government's view that the Chief Electoral Officer would be competent and professional enough to do a review that would give an honest reflection, seeing as last night it said, among other things, that the Chief Electoral Officer did things to create an illusion.
Again I point out that this just underscores one more aspect of how the government views the Chief Electoral Officer as somebody to be controlled and opposed; whereas the opposition and, I think, the vast majority of Canadians think people like Auditors General and Chief Electoral Officers are some of their best friends here on the Hill.
Thanks, Chair.
Mr. Chair, the assertions made by Mr. Christopherson are incorrect.
The Chief Electoral Officer reports to this committee. Mr. Christopherson will be aware, and others on committee will be aware, of the fact that I have expressed frustration on numerous occasions in regard to the opaque nature of his reporting, of how difficult it is to tease out actual detailed information on things as simple as whether or not any individuals have been prosecuted, and if so, how many and where, for voting fraudulently.
I've mentioned examples of how his reports are frequently very short of information on the specifics that we—effectively, his board of directors—need to review. This committee has the opportunity to ask any question, and indeed, it would be my intention to ask questions about these subjects afterwards.
As everybody knows, I've mentioned on a number of occasions how I was very proud to have set up the meetings of groups of disabled people—or a group of disabled people—that led to the inclusion of certain provisions in clause 7 of this bill, Bill , which will amend section 18 of the Canada Elections Act, specifying and requiring the Chief Electoral Officer to ensure that people can get out and vote and that they know how to exercise their rights, rights that are there in principle but not in practice if people are unaware of how to exercise them.
These are rights such as the right to become a candidate or finding out how to put your name on the list of electors if it was left off. The voter information card simply says, as one knows if one looks at it, that this shows you were on the voters list. But you don't know that you're not on the voters list if you don't have the voter card, right? This includes how to vote—different times and dates and locations, including voting by mail, voting at the returning office and so on—and how to vote if you're disabled, if you have problems getting access to the polling station, and so on.
These are all things that we have to enumerate in the law because they weren't being done adequately. I point to this all to make the point, Mr. Chair, that it's actually pretty difficult to figure out how to make sure that he then reports adequately in the future. I'm serving notice now that, statutory requirement or not, it is my intention—assuming we have someone on the committee after this law goes through after the election occurs, and if I'm still elected—to be asking him how he complied: how much money he spent, did he spend it in both official languages, and did he do a review afterwards.
If he doesn't have answers to that, I'll be very critical. It's his obligation to keep accurate records on these matters, and it's our obligation to ensure that he does so in a competent manner.
There is one final note, Mr. Chair, which is interesting with regard to the issue of competence in the administration of the vouching procedure, something that was, after all, the issue on which the litigation over Opitz v. Wrzesnewskyj in Etobicoke Centre took place. In that matter, the CEO did nothing to audit or investigate until such time as the matter was before the Supreme Court.
Then and only then did he ask Mr. Neufeld to prepare a report, so I would not say that alacrity in dealing with problems associated with voter verification has been very high on his priority list, and we seek to make sure that it will be, in order to ensure that all Canadians actually are able to exercise their section 3 right, which includes the right to have my vote count. It doesn't count for much if an election can be controverted where I voted legitimately and others did not, thereby changing the results in the riding.
That, of course, is the entire point of the security measures we're putting in place. They're reasonable. They are absolutely balanced to the issue at hand. We seem to forget—or at least members on the opposite side forget—that there are millions of Canadians who can be deprived of their section 3 right if their vote is cast in a meaningless manner because other votes were cast improperly by those who were not eligible to vote, or perhaps even fraudulently.
Thank you.
In the English version of amendment G-8, paragraph (a) changes the amending clause. The following is stated in subsection 53(1):
[English]
The portion of subsection 161(1) of the French version of the Act before paragraph (a) is replaced by the following:
[Translation]
There is also the text we want to add to the Canada Elections Act.
In order to do the same in the French version, paragraph (a) states that the amending clause of the current bill is changing. It states the same thing as subsection 53(1), as follows: “The portion of subsection 161(1) of the French version of the Act before paragraph (a) is replaced by the following:”. There is also paragraph (b), since the text we want to insert in the French version is already partially there. So we only need to change the last line of that part. That is why changes are being made from line 40 of paragraph (b) on page 26 to line 3 on page 27 in order to insert the words “scrutin, s'inscrire en personne”, which is the last part in the English text.
As for the current English text, there is no French version, but it has to be included to point out that the French version has changed.
It is complicated, but I hope it makes sense.
No other party has an amendment like this, and it does take some explanation. It also takes some sensitivity as to why I'm bringing this forward.
Let me just state at the outset that a previously non-controversial—I haven't seen anything in the media about it, but I think it's quite significant—portion of has been to create four new advance poll days. I'm certainly very much in favour of more advance polls. However, one of these days will forevermore, as a mandatory rule, fall on a Sunday. That's the first time in the history of Canada that we have had a profound civic engagement mandated on a Sunday.
Now, this country has moved a long way, and for good reason, since 1906 and the Lord's Day Act. It said that as much as the state could decree it, people could not be busy on Sundays. You couldn't keep your store open; you couldn't do things on Sunday. I'm certainly not trying to prevent people from doing the day-to-day things that an increasingly secular society wants to do on a Sunday. However, had this law been in place in 2011, we would have had mandatory advance polls across Canada on Easter Sunday.
I do know that the Conference of Catholic Bishops expressed concern when there was a mandatory advance poll on Good Friday in the 2011 election.
It should go without saying that the Prime Minister can choose to avoid such things as advance polls falling on such sacred days as Good Friday by choosing an election day that is further out than the mandatory minimum number of days. There is some flexibility about what days on which advance polls will fall.
In this case, there will be no way that any future prime minister, short of amending the act, will be able to avoid an advance poll falling on a Sunday. I have raised this in debate in the House at second reading. Conservative members of Parliament expressed the view that they wouldn't personally vote on a Sunday and that people certainly have the choice of not voting on a Sunday, and that a vast number of Canadians don't find it a trouble to observe the Sabbath because they don't.
My concerns are twofold. One is the impact on those who must attend at advance polls, and they will include scrutineers who volunteer, as well as poll workers, as well as Elections Canada folks. They will have to be engaged on a Sunday. There is an issue of their religious observances, which one might agree for a large number of Canadians happen to fall on a Sunday. The other concern, regardless of religious concerns, bears on the logistics. Quite a lot of polling stations in this country are co-located in churches.
My amendment proposes to move that extra advance polling date to a Saturday. A lot of churches have no problem whatsoever, and as a matter of fact benefit from having the polling station at the church on the corner. Everybody knows where it is. On Fridays and Saturdays, it doesn't make any difference.
But I think it's going to create a lot of logistical problems of real significance. Again, whenever we're changing how people vote, where people vote, it can create more confusion. I think this amendment will resolve and avoid both potential difficulties for practising Christians, as well as avoiding logistical difficulties for churches that serve as polling stations.
I would ask my friends in the Conservative party to support my amendment so there would be four advance polling days, but it will not include a Sunday.
:
Thank you. Yes, I do move that.
It's another part of the attestation package and this is just about keeping the oaths that are going to be sworn by people who have not adequate identification on residence. Anyway, keeping all the oaths in a separate envelope will allow the returning officer to compile the names of those who have taken or co-signed an oath to verify there are no duplicate names. If you recall in the last election, when we discussed with both Monsieur Mayrand and Mr. Neufeld and others, they keep saying there were 1,200 people, I think, who were affected, but that was an approximate number because they didn't actually open up the envelopes and count and verify to an exact number. They just did a random sample, a random audit, and approximated.
We're saying that's probably not the best way to do it, so keep all of those people who were signing and attesting oaths in a separate envelope so when an audit is done after the fact they will have actual numbers. They will be able to take a look at every single oath that was taken and attested. That's all it says. It's just enhancing the integrity and security of the vote.
This relates to a recommendation from Mr. Mayrand in relation to bingo cards. People who are not familiar with voting day procedures won't know what we're talking about, but those of us who have been candidates know what they are. It's the information about who has voted and who hasn't voted on the day of the election. They allow poll workers for the various parties to run around and collect them, figure out who has voted and who hasn't voted, and call out your vote to make sure they get to the polls.
Bill does something that hasn't been done before with our election laws, which is to allow the cards produced on these days to be collected by the parties afterwards for additional personal information that they build up on the voting base. The purpose of my amendment is to remove this use of bingo cards as a further intrusion into personal information and also as creating a risk that the Chief Electoral Officer has mentioned, that this could, in some circumstances, require the returning officer to unseal a ballot box. The recommendation of the Chief Electoral Officer is that this provision should not be included in the bill.
My amendment seeks to change clause 67 on page 34 by just shortening it up. It would delete the lines around the representatives of the candidate’s party, and the providing after polling day, and read as follows:
with one copy of each statement of the vote in respect of the candidate's electoral district.
Thank you.
:
With the amendment from Ms. May having been voted down on the government side, therefore this new procedure....
The Chief Electoral Officer also recommended what Ms. May had put forward. Since that's not going ahead, he then said that we need a technical amendment. On this one, I don't know why I guessed in advance, but the government hasn't put in a technical amendment on this. Basically it would make it workable, apparently, from the perspective of Elections Canada.
The amendment reads as follows:
(1) If the copy of the documents prepared under paragraph 162(i.1) is missing, the returning officer may open the ballot box and the envelope that contains the copy of the documents.
(2) The returning officer shall not open an envelope that appears to contain ballots.
I sought legal advice from counsel at Elections Canada, because this is a very technical point. This is exactly the wording they said would accomplish the goal of making sure that when these documents are passed on, if any are missing then they'll know where to go to open an envelope to find them. That's all this is seeking to achieve. I'm going to plead a kind of ignorance in the sense that it's very technical, because I don't understand enough about which envelopes things get put in and which don't.
I'm wondering if the government had looked at it, because it was one that—
:
I'd like to just explain this briefly. I had mentioned, I think, to Ms. May what the rationale was and I'm not sure I've spoken to anybody else.
At the moment what's happening with clause 74 is that the ban on transmitting broadcasting results from polls is being lifted. I understand the rationale that in the new communicative universe we live in, word can travel through many other means other than through broadcasting. The sense of that being an effective barrier has been diminished; however, it remains the case that broadcasting is one of the main ways in which people will receive their information.
When they know the results from polls that have closed in other time zones, we believe that it's reasonable to assume that an unspecified number of people may have their voting pattern affected by that. They may decide not to vote if it looks like the election.... If you're in B.C., for example, the election has already been determined and there's still an hour, an hour and a half, left in your time zone, you may not turn out.
That is the primary reason why there was a broadcasting ban in the first place. Therefore, the only way to create full parity and equality of voting across the country, so that every voter has the same condition—no voter knows the results elsewhere until after they've voted—the only way to do that is to preclude Elections Canada from transmitting the results to the public before all polling stations close.
The fact of the matter is, there's a very close real-time closing of stations in the country now, so the gap won't be that long. But in some parts of the country people will have to wait just a little bit longer in order for people, primarily in British Columbia and Alberta, to get a chance to vote without knowing the results elsewhere that, as I said before, could affect the way they vote.
I move, Mr. Chair, to replace section 329 with the following:
The returning officer shall not transmit the result or purported result of the vote in an electoral district to the public before the close of all the polling stations in Canada.
I'm happy for that to go to an immediate vote because, again, we have lots to do.
This recommendation, members of committee may recall, was made by Duff Conacher, the witness for Democracy Watch, in which he suggested we take this opportunity under the to create a legislative framework for the leaders' debate. I think we'll all agree that the leaders' debate has become a very significant pivot point during election campaigns and I think a lot of Canadians assume that there are some set of rules and that Elections Canada supervises them.
Probably all of us around this table know it's basically a large cartel of public and private broadcasters—CBC, Radio Canada, TVA, Global, and CTV—that makes a decision among the news directors, generally in consultation with the leaders of the more established parties, and there are no rules. Since there are no rules they can be applied rather inconsistently. So this amendment as proposed by Duff Conacher of Democracy Watch would suggest that the Chief Electoral Officer would henceforth have the ability to set the number and date for election debates, supervise them, invite to the debate the leader of every party in the last election that either had a candidate elected under that party's banner or had won 5% of the vote, and then require all the broadcasters in Canada to broadcast the debate.
This is in the interest of fair, transparent, and consistent leaders' debates for greater public information and engagement in electoral campaigns.
So I submit to you amendment Green Party-40.
:
Okay, on NDP-40, this probably is the last one we'll have time for. This is the first in this new part of the division in the act on the voter contact calling services. This is a section that very much ties into the March 2012 NDP House motion that all parties voted for, calling for legislation within six months to deal with the issue of deceptive communications, and phone calls in particular. We all know that specific area, along with what else was in the motion, which was the access of the Chief Electoral Officer to campaign receipts, never did get tabled until almost 18 months after it was supposed to be.
That said, it is now in the act, which was very belatedly tabled, with so many other things that we didn't expect. Generally, this section of the bill is something that we welcome. I have serious concerns, which will be reflected in the amendments, that there are some gaps that make it overly minimalist for its goals and those amendments are seeking simply to make it that much better within the terms of the system being proposed.
This amendment is specifying that “the calling service provider shall not block the display of its telephone number when contacting voters”, “at the beginning of the call, the name of the person or group on whose behalf the call is made and their party affiliation, if any,” has to be indicated, and at the end of the call, a telephone number for contacting.
It could well be that indirectly, through a rather Byzantine knock-on effect of legislation, current CRTC rules may well insert this, but there is a lot to be said for clarity in the specific legislation about these identification requirements.
Finally, this was asked for by the Chief Electoral Officer. That's why it's being proposed.
:
It sounds like a boat in the America's yacht race.
I will explain this, so I want everyone to open the bill itself and turn to page 40. Go down to proposed subsection 348.06(2) under “Time for filing and contents”.
I'll read proposed subsection 348.06(2):
For each election period to which the agreement applies, the registration notice shall be filed not later than 48 hours after the first call is made under the agreement and shall set out
That's what I'm looking at here because we may have a problem if there's a filing of 48 hours after the first call is made, if it's the day before election day itself. I'm citing a possibility of abuse here, because the rationale is simply that in the 48-hour period, if you make these calls with a robocall—mostly robocalls—if the call is made and then you have 48 hours, that could go past election day itself. Remember, I'm not talking about the writ period. I'm just talking about election day. This is the day prior to election day if the calls are made.
So if there is skullduggery at play—as I'll describe it—many people could call the CRTC to report the calls, but the CRTC will have no idea what the script of the call is, who is making them, and who is receiving them.
So there is a potential for abuse here and I hope that we can close that by amending this to say that prior to the call, you register. I don't have a specific time in there. I'm open to suggestion, but I'm more concerned about the fact that there is that 48-hour period after you make a call to report it. If those calls are made the day before election day, then that could cause problems for election day only to be answered after.
I'm open to questions. Maybe we should let this stand for a while. I understand this is new to everybody. I don't want to be rushing it.
:
NDP-41, which I will move, is to insert a new section after proposed section 348.11 on page 43.
Just to set this up, it follows the new provision that says the CRTC “is responsible for establishing and maintaining a registry, to be known as the Voter Contact Registry, in which all documents” listed elsewhere are to be put.
What we're wanting to add is that the CRTC:
shall keep all documents and information filed in the Voter Contact Registry for at least seven years after the day on which they are provided.
The rationale is that when we asked the CRTC how long documents would be kept, it turned out to be a guesstimate. But the guesstimate at the time was seven years. Subsequently we heard that it actually might vary according to different government policies. We were referred to a government policy link on how long different kinds of documents are kept.
This is in the spirit of both the length of time that was being suggested, five years and 10 years in general, and the fact that the CRTC can be the ultimate guarantor of making sure that documents that are filed with it do not disappear. It's a government agency with the capacity. There will be absolutely no problem along the lines of what the minister was bringing up in the House about different organizations with different capacities and lifespans not being able to keep documents.
Even when some of the actors who have to keep documents at the moment only for one year, and that will change in some context to three years with the government's amendment, if any of them go bust or don't do a proper job, or whatever, then we really need to know that any of that information that has been passed on will at least be available in the CRTC's hands.
On some level, all of the discussions—including stuff I have been pushing hard on—about the one-year retention period being such a problem because it's so short, can be solved by knowing that whatever the CRTC receives, they have to keep for seven years. That's all this is about.
It's actually, I think, an extremely important amendment, but not one that I think in any way goes against the spirit of what this section is supposed to be all about, the voter contact registry's purpose. It would change nothing about how the whole system works other than insurance that documents won't disappear.
:
I'm going to have to say that was my best shot for one that I thought the government would be going with us on.
Maybe this one....
At the top of page 44—I will be moving this obviously, 41.1, to amend 348.15, which reads in part:
disclose to the Commissioner any document or information that it received under this Division that the Commissioner considers necessary for the purpose of ensuring compliance with and enforcement of this Act, other than this Division.
This amendment is simply a way of replacing the word “necessary” with “relevant”, “that the Commissioner considers relevant for the purpose of ensuring compliance”.
I'm worried that the standard of necessity is unnecessarily high. I'm reminded that the word preceding it is “considers” so it really should not be something second-guessed by the CRTC. If the commissioner says to them, “I consider this necessary” that really should be the end of it. Nonetheless, the commissioner will internalize this standard and “considers necessary” is higher than “considers relevant”.
To be enforceable this system depends completely on the link-up between the CRTC and the commissioner, because the CRTC's role, apart from being a recipient, is actually very limited and our colleague from Privy Council mentioned this earlier about how very little the CRTC does on some aspects of this.
I think giving the easiest possible access to these documents and information should be a priority. Where it says, “the Commissioner considers necessary”, it should be “the Commissioner considers relevant”.
:
Okay, so I will move NDP-41.2. It's an insertion at the top of the page, adding some provisions to the.... The section that I just spoke about was the duty of the CRTC to disclose when the commissioner asks for information on this necessity standard.
There is nothing in the amendments on creating this automated call and live-voice call system with the CRTC. There's nothing that states any affirmative duty on the part of the CRTC to alert the commissioner, if, for some reason, a suspicion or a pattern of some sort seems to be revealed that some employee who's involved in or charged with this division notices.
One reason this is important, to go back to an analogy between the relationship between the Chief Electoral Officer and what will be the now moved commissioner in the DPP.... Sheila Fraser appeared and said that unless you specifically provide the mechanisms for sharing, then you have to make sure that somewhere else in the law there are provisions for proactive sharing by the agency. If not, there could be this weird gap.
Now, if it turns out that there are existing rules under the CRTC where they do have some kind of duty to alert the commissioner, then I wouldn't have any problem, but I've not been able to find any such rules, and I'd much prefer, again, that it's all cleanly part of the same regime in the act.
What this says is that the CRTC shall inform every employee whose work is related to this new voter contact registry system, that “if her or she suspects an offence under any provision of this Act has been committed, he or she has a duty to inform a designated Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission official.” Through that official, obviously, the CRTC shall then, upon receiving that information, “refer the matter to the Commissioner for investigation.”
It's just a neat mechanism. That's neat in the sense of clean, not neat in the sense of cool. It may be both—
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair. I will move this, NDP-42.
This one very simply states, as I read it:
This Part applies to any calling service provider, whether it is located inside or outside Canada.
This is, to use not too fancy a language, an extraterritorial application clause. I would say I could well have worded it as for greater certainty, because in certain aspects, the CRTC, like any agency, has developed ways in which its rules can apply to actors calling into Canada, etc. But the fact of having this specifically stated is important because the general rule of interpretation of Canadian legislation, in the criminal realm especially, is that our criminal laws and our offence laws apply territorially, unless it's clear that they are intended not to.
“Territorially” can be extended interpretively to include connections and links that start somewhere and end up in Canada, and obviously calling would be like that. But there are all kinds of ways one can imagine that offshore activity, where calling service providers, whether illicit or not—but those who are being hired, say, by a political party or a candidate—can be sitting outside Canada. My understanding from recent information is that more and more calling service providers in Canada now have branch plants, not to say that they've necessarily moved entirely from Canada.
One of the worst scenarios would be that somehow or other, we end up with confusion after this enters into place, into force, about whether or not the CRTC can just creatively interpret the whole thing to apply to external calling service providers. But there is absolutely no doubt by virtue of putting this in.
So every single obligation that any calling service provider has under here, specifically applies to calling service providers outside of Canada by virtue of this clause, and that's what I'm intending.
:
There are some others that go with this one, right?
A voice: LIB-29 is identical.
The Chair: LIB-29 is identical, and of course, would be dealt with at the same time.
There is also a line conflict with G-21, so we will wait and see how this turns out to decide how that will work.
So, here we are on PV-44.
(Amendment negatived [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: It is defeated, and therefore so is LIB-29, which moves us, then, to G-21, and there will be no conflict.
:
Chair, I have a question, maybe to staff.
I'm going on the assumption that this motion won't carry, but whether it does or not, right now, whether it's one year or three, the provider has those records. If it changes to three—just to make it easier—and that company goes bankrupt halfway through the second year of the three years, what happens to that information?
If the CRTC doesn't have it right from the get-go—obviously I'm laying the groundwork for our amendment that is coming up—then merely saying that the information, the script, the audio recordings, all of it should be forwarded to the CRTC immediately, for a whole host of reasons, one of which is that I'm wondering what happens in the event of a bankruptcy....
:
I can't move away any further and still be part of this.
NDP-46 is an amendment to insert into the clause a proposed new section 348.2 that in summary takes care of many of the issues that, bit by bit, some of the amendments from the NDP and primarily from the Liberals and the Greens have been trying to accomplish. It basically sets out that calling service providers—who are often called robocall firms, but may also provide live voice call services—have to file with the CRTC a list of all telephone numbers that were called as well as a copy of each script and recording.
I'll repeat that. They have to file a list of all telephone numbers called as well as a copy of each script and recording. Phone numbers are nowhere mentioned in the new provisions. The Chief Electoral Officer appeared before us and said that they need to be. The fact of having to chase down the numbers called under a contract between a calling service provider and a party, for example, would seem to make no sense, if you could simply say that you have to retain these phone numbers and also convey them. That's what filing with the CRTC means.
The scripts and recordings simply refer to the fact that these have to be retained. But at the moment they don't have to be sent to the CRTC. To go back to Mr. Christopherson's good point and my earlier point, it was that if the CRTC—although this has now been voted down, let's just hope that the CRTC has longer retention policies than one, three, or even five years—ends up with documents or recordings or phone numbers in its hands, there is less chance that they won't be found at the stage of compliance and investigation. So we want those sent to the CRTC as well under the system. The calling service providers themselves then have to keep them for five years.
The next provision does exactly the same thing. It mirrors the previous one, but it makes the burden on every person, group, or third party—and person or group includes parties—a bit less than that for the calling service provider. This is their business, so five years makes sense; but for everybody else it would be three years. However, there was a provision requested by the Chief Electoral Officer, which is that although they must keep copies of the scripts and recordings for three years, if they are requested by the commissioner to keep them for up to five years, they have to do so.
So this is a parallel structure involving phone numbers, scripts, and audio recordings, all having to be sent to the CRTC. The calling service providers have to keep them for five years; for everybody else, it is three years, with the option for the commissioner to ask that it be extended to five.
That's the structure of the amendment. I don't think it could be any more obvious how it both fits within the scheme but also enhances and fills some gaps. What are those gaps, again? They are that phone numbers, audio recordings, and scripts do not have to be sent to the CRTC under the government's proposal. Also, phone numbers don't even have to be retained by anybody.
That is the purpose of this amendment, and I think I moved it.
I just want to underscore the points made and introduce a couple of new thoughts. Given the fact that this material is not just being kept for interest's sake, it could ultimately be evidence in potential criminal charges. If it's potential evidence in a court proceeding, why would we take the risk and leave it in private hands, given that we're talking about digital information that can be sent so easily? It's not like it's onerous or expensive or back in the day when it had to be all paper. It's potential evidence in court cases being kept in private hands, yet almost the push of a button would guarantee that that information remains in the public domain by virtue of being with the CRTC.
There are a number of other benefits, Chair.
Number one, the procedure for getting the information, for accessing it and releasing it, would become standardized so that once the first request came in to the CRTC, they would then, if they haven't already, put together the policy and the procedures whereby they could and/or would release the information. After that, every request would just follow the same standard, the same policy of the CRTC, and we have the added benefit that that policy can be looked at by the public because the CRTC is in the public domain. Not only that, if you think conversely that that same information resides with all these multiple, private entities, the ability to get information in a timely fashion...especially since there's no power to compel any kind of evidence that the Chief Electoral Officer has been asking for. So this really important, critical evidence is in the hands of a multitude of private entities, and each one may or may not be the easiest to work with in terms of responding to requests for information. So, at best, we could end up with a patchwork, where some give the information in its entirety and some don't. Some refuse to give it, and we have to go through a whole procedure. Others are dragging their heels. All these problems are quite legitimate and can come up, and they're all avoidable. It's all of that, including the issue I raised earlier about a company being structured just for the election, performing this function, and then wrapping up after the election. There's no means under the law to get that information.
So, all of this information is being left deliberately in the hands of private individuals and private companies, yet it's public information. We're actually making laws that force them to give that information. So this amendment just makes all the sense in the world. With a push of a button, that information is transferred over to the CRTC. There it is in the public domain. It's accessible, it's transparent, and everything's fine. We avoid all those other concerns, including anybody who has tried to set up a front organization. It wouldn't be a front. It would be a real organization, a real numbered company, and then it just evaporates six months after the election.
All those concerns, Chair, every one of them is dealt with by adopting this motion.
So, if the government is serious about wanting to make sure there's a trail so that officials can go back and confirm that everything was done according to the rules—but that trail could be disrupted if we leave it the way it is—we could correct all of that with one motion. We could make sure that that information is there should it be requested afterwards. If they don't support this, then, again, one has to be suspect, and history will tell. We'll just see what happens after the next election, and we will see if they don't support this now how this measure being in place would avoid those potentials. I'm willing to bet they're going to be there. We won't know for sure till it happens, but we could be super safe and super sure if we just pass this motion.
So I put it to the government that if they are serious and sincere about wanting to actually have this information, this potential evidence accessible after the election, then the only thing that makes any sense is to put in a law that says they have to push the button that sends the information into the public domain, and then the goal the government says they want to achieve, can be, with the guarantee.
Right now, like a lot of things, it sounds good, but the end result may be very different.
Thank you, Chair.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
A good part of my amendment is very similar to the one that was just defeated, but it has additional clauses that are worth describing.
As you can tell, the goal here, and again these were recommendations from a number of witnesses, certainly the Chief Electoral Officer and Democracy Watch, and a few others, I believe, calling for the preservation of the telephone numbers that were called as an integral part of keeping track of the use of these kinds of campaign tools, especially if they're going to be misused. It would be a very good way to check, for instance, if it was a legitimate call or an illegitimate call, based on robocall servers having a list of the telephone numbers. If a telephone number was called that was never on that list, you'd have a pretty good sense you're looking for someone else.
But the second part of my amendment also deals with the commissioner having the ability to...and it is part of Elections Canada's brief at the bottom of page 6. There should be a mechanism not involving a court order for the commissioner to obtain access to call scripts or recordings, or to request that they be preserved beyond one year if a court order is anticipated. This particular provision that I'm putting forward is actually modelled on something that may look familiar to government members on the other side. It's actually modelled on Bill 's preservation demand provisions in the online bullying bill, to ensure that there can be a request that material be preserved before it might be destroyed in the ordinary course of business.
So I think I've probably given you enough details on this, Mr. Chair. It does make the system more robust. More critical information is preserved, and it is also more accessible to the Commissioner of Canada Elections, who without having to go to court for a court order, can just ask the companies that have that material in their possession to retain it and preserve it.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
:
Right. We do have additional copies. I had been advised earlier that the best way to do it is to explain it verbally and then hand out copies. I don't know whether we can make additional copies, but Chair, I'll ask your direction on this. Even though proposed new section 351.2, the one I'm going to be introducing, is consequential in many respects to amendments G-22 and G-24, did you want to deal with G-22 first?
I'll tell you what it's about. Let me explain it; it might help.
We could probably deal with amendments G-22 and G-24 at the same time. These are dealing with third parties. Concerning amendment G-24 specifically, you may recall that in his 2010 report the Chief Electoral Officer recommended that amendments be made to the Canada Elections Act to ensure that third parties have a connection to Canada. This bill requires third parties to certify that they have a connection to Canada. To ensure that illegitimate third parties cannot skirt the rules, it's important to have a clear prohibition in the act. Amendment G-22 is consequential to G-24.
So that's what we're dealing with in the case of those two.
Now, the additional amendment, which I'm going to read to you and then hand out.... It's proposed new section 351.2, and I want to ask the officials of the Privy Council their opinion. We say:
For greater certainty for the purposes of subsections 350(1), (4), and section 351.1, if election advertising is transmitted during an election period, it shall be considered advertising expenses, regardless of when it was incurred.
In other words, we're saying that third parties should have a cap of $500 during an election period, but if any ads were produced prior to an election itself—say, for example, if a television ad was produced six months prior to a writ and cost $10,000 but only aired during the election—the production costs should be considered an election expense.
It would be the same thing if—I don't know whether you can actually do this—someone wanted to prepay election ads before the election. Clearly it's an election expense, at least in our....
That is what this amendment introducing a new section 351.2 is about. I don't know whether we can get the staff to make copies and hand it out, but that's what it's—
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair. I will move amendment NDP-48.
Amendment NDP-48 refers to the fact that Bill has increased the maximum contribution by individuals to $1,500 from $1,200, which represents a 25% increase. This is one of the provisions that we express concern about, because although to some it may feel like a small amount, it is 25%, $300 more.
We had testimony from a professor from UNB who indicated that in fact wealthier Canadians make up the vast majority of those making donations above $200. Being able to give an extra $300 on top of $1,200 is actually something that will disproportionately favour wealthier Canadians for whom that extra bit is not a big deal. It probably will be enhanced by the fact that there do not appear to be any consequential tax amendments, so there are no extra tax credits available. Anybody giving that extra money would be doing it strictly out of their own pocket.
We do feel that this actually belies the government's claim, at least the minister's claim, that somehow this bill gets rid of big money. There are attempts—I will give him credit for that—in the banking section. We feel their attempts went wrong. They actually won't accomplish the goal, but that was an attempt. Here it's absolutely contrary to the purpose, as is the big provision that would have exempted fundraising expenses for previous donors, which I know the government is now intending to remove. We'll only get to that after five o'clock. Nonetheless, issues of big money and money politics were created by Bill , and this indeed is one of them.
We are moving that the $1,500 individual donation across four different categories be returned to what it currently is, which is $1,200.
:
I have a point of order, Mr. Chair. Thank you very much.
I want to clarify things, since points of order are permitted by the committee motion that was adopted by the majority Conservatives just a few weeks ago.
Some hon. members: Hear, hear!
Mr. Peter Julian: Yeah, well, I'm not sure the public is going to be particularly impressed by that “hear, hear”, given that this committee now has to go through over 200 pages of the unfair elections act and dozens and dozens of amendments without even having any sort of debate.
My question and the reason I raised the point of order to start, Mr. Chair, is that I don't see our Privy Council representatives there. Of course, there will, I believe, be points of order on the admissibility, perhaps, of certain things brought before this committee. This is…well, the only way to put it is that it's an appalling abuse of what should be a process of due diligence, but it's no surprise to us. We've seen three bills rejected by the Supreme Court from this government over the last month.
So, will representatives from Privy Council be available, at the table, for points of order that will come up over the next few hours?
:
My clerks will make sure I'm on the right one when it's time.
Thank you for your help, Mr. Julian.
On NDP-51, a recorded vote....
(Amendment negatived: nays 6; yeas 3 [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: On NDP-52, we'll have a recorded vote, please.
(Amendment negatived: nays 5; yeas 4 [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: Next, BQ-6 is inadmissible. It's gone.
The next one is clause 80.
:
We will have a recorded vote on BQ-7.
(Amendment negatived: nays 9; yeas 0 [See Minutes of Proceedings])
(Clause 85 agreed to: yeas 6; nays 3)
The Chair: On Liberal-35, we'll have a recorded vote.
(Amendment negatived: nays 5; yeas 4 [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: We'll move on to NDP-53 with a recorded vote.
(Amendment negatived: nays 6; yeas 3 [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: We are voting on PV-55 with a recorded vote.
(Amendment negatived: nays 5; yeas 4 [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: We are on NDP-54 with a recorded vote.
(Amendment negatived: nays 5; yeas 4 [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: We are on NDP-55 with a recorded vote.
(Amendment negatived: nays 5; yeas 4 [See Minutes of Proceedings])
:
We did amendment NDP-57, and now we're on amendment PV-56. Does it carry?
Mr. Nathan Cullen: Could we have a recorded vote, please, Chair?
The Chair: We'll have a recorded vote.
(Amendment negatived: nays 6; yeas 3 [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: I think I'm on amendment NDP-58.
Mr. Nathan Cullen: Could we have a recorded vote?
The Chair: We'll have a recorded vote for amendment NDP-58, certainly.
(Amendment negatived: nays 5; yeas 3 [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: We're on amendment G-26.
Mr. Nathan Cullen: Could we have a recorded vote, please, Chair?
The Chair: If amendment G-26 carries, the next five amendments would then not be voted on.
(Amendment agreed to: yeas 9; nays 0 [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: It carries, which means we don't vote on amendments LIB-36, NDP-59, PV-57, BQ-8, and NDP-59.1. That will be in Hansard for you.
Mr. Nathan Cullen: A recorded vote, please....
(Amendment negatived: nays 5; yeas 4 [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: Now we're on PV-63.
An hon. member: A recorded vote, please....
(Amendment negatived: nays 6; yeas 3 [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: Government-28, all those in favour?
Mr. Peter Julian: Recorded vote, please....
(Amendment agreed to: yeas 9; nays 0 [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: We're going to NDP-62, which is identical to G-29. We'll have a recorded vote on it, but whatever happens to one, happens to the other.
(Amendment agreed to: yeas 9; nays 0 [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: I have G-30 next.
(Amendment agreed to [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: Now we have a recorded vote on NDP-63.
(Amendment agreed to: yeas 9; nays 0 [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: Wow, what a friendly group.
I say that we're at LIB-38, which is identical to NDP-63. Isn't that what we just did?
A voice: Yes.
The Chair: So LIB-38 has been passed.
PV-64 is also identical to it, so we won't vote on it.
I'm at amendment G-31. No. Give me just a second.
We're at clause 86 as amended, and I would like to know if you're all in favour of that.
(Clause 86 as amended agreed to)
The Chair: We're on amendment BQ-9.
(Amendment negatived [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: We're on amendment BQ-10.
(Amendment negatived [See Minutes of Proceedings])
(Clause 87 agreed to on division)
The Chair: We're on amendment PV-65, and we'll have a recorded vote.
(Amendment negatived: nays 6; yeas 3 [See Minutes of Proceedings])
(Clause 88 agreed to on division)
The Chair: I'll now move to amendment NDP-64, but it is also identical to amendments LIB-39 and PV-66. There's another line conflict later on, but we'll get to that too.
Let's see what happens under NDP-64, with a recorded vote.
(Amendment negatived: nays 5; yeas 4 [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: So the three of them are defeated.
Now we're on amendment G-32, and we'll have a recorded vote on this.
(Amendment agreed to: yeas 9; nays 0 [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: Excellent job. We need to vote on clause 89.
(Clause 89 as amended agreed to on division)
(Clause 90 agreed to)
(Clause 91 and 92 agreed to on division)
The Chair: I now have amendment Government-33 in my hands.
Mr. Craig Scott: Can we have a recorded vote?
The Chair: I've just been told there's a spelling mistake that's been changed on this page.
Shall we vote on this? We'll have a recorded vote.
(Amendment agreed to: yeas 9; nays 0 [See Minutes of Proceedings])
(Clause 93 as amended agreed to on division)
:
We're on amendment Government-34
(Amendment agreed to [See Minutes of Proceedings])
(Clause 94 as amended agreed to)
(Clauses 95 and 96 agreed to)
The Chair: I go then to Liberal-40. It's identical to PV-67, so a vote for one will be a vote for all.
I hear a call for a recorded vote.
(Amendment negatived: nays 5; yeas 4 [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: Both are defeated, a two-for-one special on those. I am now at G-35.
(Amendment agreed to [See Minutes of Proceedings])
(Clause 97 as amended agreed to on division)
(Clauses 98 and 99 agreed to on division)
The Chair: We have NDP-65, and a recorded vote.
(Amendment negatived: nays 5; yeas 4 [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: Before we vote on clause 100, because that will be significant—a triple-digit clause—we're going to pause just for a minute.
:
We'll come back to order. We did a bunch in a run there, and I'm thankful that you all cooperated, and we did a bunch of work.
We are now, from a straight significance point of view, at clause 100.
(Clauses 100 to 106 inclusive agreed to on division)
The Chair: We have to wait on clause 107. This one has a new motion. We have, in fact, new Liberal amendment 40.1 and a new government amendment, whatever it is. They're identical, so a vote on one will be a vote on both.
(Amendment agreed to on division [See Minutes of Proceedings])
(Clause 107 as amended agreed to on division)
:
I now have amendment Liberal-41.
All in favour? No, there's a line conflict. Amendment PV-68, NDP-66, and NDP-65.1 all have a line conflict, so let's move on to voting on amendment Liberal-41.
(Amendment negatived [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: It is defeated, as were all the others that were attached to it.
No, it's just a line conflict. They're not similar enough for me to go that fast, okay.
So now were going to amendment PV-68.
(Amendment negatived [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: Amendment NDP-65.1....
An hon. member: A recorded vote.
The Chair: Certainly.
(Amendment negatived [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: Amendment NDP-66....
:
We'll have a recorded vote on Liberal-43.
(Amendment negatived: nays 5; yeas 4 [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: We go to amendment Liberal-44 with a recorded vote, please.
(Amendment negatived: nays 5; yeas 4 [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: Now to Government-36; there is a line conflict with the next one, but let's see how we go.
(Amendment agreed to [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: So then amendment NDP-68 no longer needs to be voted on, Liberal-45 and PV-69 also.
Can we throw in just a couple more?
NDP-69....
:
I will go then to Government-37, I believe, unless there is a clause in the middle of this. I don't think there is.
(Amendment agreed to [See Minutes of Proceedings])
(Clause 109 as amended agreed to on division)
(Clause 110 agreed to on division)
The Chair: I now go to a new clause PV-75. All in favour?
An hon. member: On division.
(Amendment negatived [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: On amendment PV-76....
(Amendment negatived [See Minutes of Proceedings])
(Clause 111 agreed to on division)
The Chair: On amendment PV-77, all in favour?
An hon. member: On division.
(Amendment negatived [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: On amendment PV-78....
An hon. member: On division.
(Amendment negatived [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: On amendment PV-79....
An hon. member: On division.
(Amendment negatived [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: On amendment G-38.
(Amendment agreed to [See Minutes of Proceedings])
(Clause 112 as amended agreed to on division)
(Clauses 113 and 114 agreed to on division)
The Chair: On amendment PV-80—
:
Hang on, we're checking. It's the same size and shape. We've determined that it's on 8 1/2 by 11 paper.
No, they're not identical so we'll vote on G-41.
(Amendment agreed to [See Minutes of Proceedings])
(Clause 155 as amended agreed to)
The Chair: Now to BQ-11....
An hon. member: On division.
(Amendment negatived [See Minutes of Proceedings])
(Clauses 156 and 157 agreed to on division)
The Chair: Liberal-53, it has some other stuff here too.
:
If it's adopted we can't go to another one, so we'll see what happens here.
(Amendment negatived: nays 5; yeas 4) [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: That moves us to Government-42.
(Amendment agreed to [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: Government-43....
(Amendment agreed to [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: Government-44, it's a roll.
(Amendment agreed to [See Minutes of Proceedings])
The Chair: Government-45....
(Amendment agreed to [See Minutes of Proceedings])
(Clause 158 agreed to on division)