Thank you for inviting me.
I'm an assistant professor in the Sprott School of Business.
Tonight I'm only going to address the issue of vouching, digital identity, and risk management. I'm going to narrow in on that as it is in reality a debate concerning identification policies and risk management practices of large public and private institutions in a modern complex society and the extensiveness and pervasiveness of these multiple overlapping personal digital identification systems.
Restated, the allegations of voter suppression are completely dependent on the unstated, implicit assumption that there are significant numbers of Canadians with zero identity cards.
In my judgment, Mr. Mayrand, Mr. Neufeld, and the political science professors have unwittingly significantly overestimated the number of Canadians with zero identity cards due to their apparent lack of familiarity with all the identification systems available today in Canada and risk management principles and practices.
I argue that it's impossible today in Canada to be digitally invisible with a zero identity of any kind in any database, i.e., not being recorded or tracked by any government or private firm anywhere. Of course voting will be suppressed for those with absolute zero digital identity, if identity is required for voting, but I'm going to introduce evidence that suggests that all Canadians have some form of identity.
I will now highlight the empirical evidence very quickly.
In Canada today, enormously powerful, real-time, connected mainframe computers and modern bureaucracies, public and private, create massive interconnected databases on we the people. Hospital databases register an electronic hospital record the very moment we are born. Birth registration is registered in a provincial records database and a birth certificate is issued. Social insurance numbers are registered in a federal database. Within six months of our coming into existence on the planet, we are already being measured and tracked. Education databases record when we start elementary school. Health ministry databases record immunization shots. Municipal databases record library cards. Another education ministry records when we start high school, and identity cards are issued. This is Michel Foucault and governmentality with a vengeance.
Most important of all, unlike the U.S., we've had our universal, singular, public health care system since 1965 that issues our universal personal health care photo identity card. I reviewed the health care ID policy of Ontario, Quebec, Alberta, Nova Scotia, Nunavut, Yukon, and Northwest Territories and discovered that it is mandatory to have a health care card to access any health care of any kind. If you don't have a health care card, you can't use the health care system, and we don't have private health care. According to the logic of the critics, this would be health care suppression.
Then we open bank accounts, and massive bank databases require two pieces of primary, i.e., government, ID—no utility bills, please—under the Bank Act, which was passed by MPs. According to the logic of the critics, this would be bank account suppression. By the way, 96% of Canadians have bank accounts per the FCAC established by this Parliament. So you MP suppressors are doing a pretty poor job.
Some of us get a passport requiring two pieces of primary government-issued ID—no utility bills, please. Indeed, since 2008 the U.S. demands a passport to enter the United States, and this is a direct quote from Homeland Security:
The Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative was designed to address the risks posed by accepting oral declarations and the many potentially unsecure documents that were being presented at U.S. ports of entry.
By the way, U.S. border control does not accept utility bills. Presumably this is foreign travel suppression.
According to the latest Passport Canada annual report, passport possession went from 45% to 70% of Canadians in a very short time, four years after the rule change.
Some of us get credit cards. The Canadian Bankers Association reports that Canadians hold 71 million credit cards: more identity; that's a lot of identity cards.
Today, an increasing number of Canadians go to post-secondary education. According to StatsCan, in 2013 there were two million students registered at colleges and universities where everyone is issued student photo ID, but in the immortal words of Senator Duffy, “Wait, there's more.” It gets better.
Every university and college that I checked requires photo ID to sit every exam in the multiple thousands of courses across Canada. This policy likely extends to those political science profs outside Canada who oppose ending vouching. By the way, I would encourage each of the 170 profs to publicly condemn their dean, their provost, and their president for such suppression of education freedom in requiring photo ID to write exams.
A final example is the delightful experience of modern air travel that starts with entering your passport in the airport kiosk. One minute later, you're asked again for photo ID to check the luggage—no utility bills, please. Then you go down to security to be groped, squeezed, and fondled, but not before being asked for your photo ID for the third time, and then finally to the gate where you are asked for the fourth time.
But wait a minute: Mayrand and the critics argue that we should not be adopting more stringent identification measures in the absence of evidence of voting fraud.
Excellent point. Where is the evidence of terrorism in Canada? There are no planes that have been hijacked and blown up in Canada. According to this curious logic, we must stop requiring photo ID to board planes in the absence of evidence of planes being blown up. And we should stop demanding student photo ID, as there's no evidence of exam fraud; of course not, because we demand photo ID.
In fact, this debate has been hijacked by an absurd test that undesirable risks must be experienced before prophylactic measures can be adopted, contrary to all principles of risk management.
Forgive me for this humour, but I'm trying to use humour to make my point.
The critics have causality upside down and backwards, and it can be reduced to the following proposition: one, have unprotected sex, and two, if a partner becomes pregnant—the evidence—then, and only then, number three, start using a prophylactic device. Clearly this is absurd. No, Mr. Mayrand. No, Mr. Neufeld. No, 170 political science profs. One uses a prophylactic device before sex, not after—and that's in all of the sex education manuals across Canada in the high schools—to ensure that the baby or the evidence does not materialize in the first place.
For the identical reason, we demand photo ID to cross the border; for the identical reason, we insist on photo ID to fly on a plane, write an exam, or open a bank account: because it is prudent and responsible risk management to adopt anticipatory precautionary measures before bad things happen, not after bad things happen.
This is exactly why the U.K. Electoral Commission, in the oldest democracy on the planet Earth, 90 days ago recommended mandatory photo ID for voting by 2019. They are following Northern Ireland, which adopted mandatory photo ID for voting in 2003, and pursuant to their study, found that mandatory photo ID does not suppress voting.
Thank you.
I don't think I can compete with Professor Lee on the humour.
I have quite a lot of experience in this area, including at the Lortie commission on electoral reform 20 years ago, and two years at Elections Canada as the director of research and policy 10 years ago. In light of that, I want to begin my comments on this bill from the perspective of policy development.
I find that on a number of important matters, Bill proposes major policy changes that are not backed up by solid evidence. By this I mean, what is the nature and extent of the problem that needs to be rectified? I researched the answer to this question by checking the backgrounders on the democratic reform website, ministerial speeches, and other documents. I'm now going to talk about three policy changes to demonstrate the point about the lack of evidence.
First, the bill proposes to abolish the voter education mandate of the Chief Electoral Officer. Members probably know that this responsibility dates from 1993, and to my knowledge no political party has ever called it into question until now. Research has shown that the decline in turnout observed in Canada and most advanced democracies has been particularly sharp among youth. In the early 2000s, concern about this rose and not just among researchers and election administrators, but on February 17, 2004, almost 10 years to a day, the House unanimously adopted a motion, part of which reads as follows:
That the House direct the Chief Electoral Officer and Elections Canada to expand its initiatives to promote the participation of young Canadians in the electoral process, and that these initiatives include making available educational material to schools and other organizations.
When I was at Elections Canada, which coincided with the adoption of that motion, I was pleased to lead the development of the first partnership with the organization that came to be known as Student Vote. We also consulted with a number of aboriginal organizations about ways of encouraging more aboriginal Canadians to exercise the franchise. Since then, a decade ago, the voter education activities of Elections Canada have expanded considerably. In the last election, for example, Student Vote reached over half a million students who participated in mock elections in schools as a voter education program.
This mandate is not unique to Elections Canada. Interestingly, the Australian Electoral Commission, the federal body, has a mandate to educate and inform the community about electoral rights and responsibilities. Similarly in New Zealand, its Electoral Commission has a mandate to promote public awareness of electoral matters by the conduct of education and information programs.
The government's backgrounder on the voter education mandate change describes this move as “back to basics”. Sounds nice, but to me this implies that voter education is not really very important. After all, we should be focusing on the basics, not on these things that are tangential, or perhaps it also implies that this is not a legitimate thing for a public management body in the field of elections to do. I strongly disagree.
Turning to political finance, there are a number of changes in the bill, but one of them is particularly puzzling. I want to highlight it because this is an area we worked on at the Lortie commission. The definition of election expenses was made comprehensive in 2004. Now the government proposes to exempt the costs of fundraising. Once again, the evidence is scanty. I could find none at all in the backgrounder that is subtitled, “Keep Big Money Out of Politics”. Why should this important activity no longer be subject to spending limits, which themselves are being raised through the same bill? I think we can predict difficulties with enforcement. After all, as you're fundraising, you're also promoting your own party or candidate, or possibly opposing the other side, or doing a bit of both. We could see that the commissioner is going to have some difficulty with this down the line. I think it's a potential Trojan Horse. It opens the door to a lot of potential difficulty and confusion.
Finally, on the Commissioner of Canada Elections, I must say it has not been demonstrated that the theoretical argument for separating the administration and the enforcement of elections is a compelling one. In my experience, according to the witnesses who have been before you, the Commissioner of Canada Elections has not been hamstrung in carrying out his duties in an independent manner. The commissioner is not a puppet of the Chief Electoral Officer, even though the commissioner is appointed by the Chief Electoral Officer.
If this bill is adopted, the appointment method will change. Rather than being appointed by an officer of Parliament, the commissioner will be appointed by the Director of Public Prosecutions, an office that was established in 2006 as part of the Accountability Act. In other words, the commissioner will become part of a departmental bureaucracy, more or less at the level of a director general, if I can look at things in the hierarchy and that sort of thing; we haven't seen the salary range and so on, that's not in the bill, of course. The commissioner will be within a departmental bureaucracy, reporting to the Attorney General who is the minister in cabinet responsible for the administration of justice. It's quite a difference in the architecture.
I find it particularly strange that the bill doesn't even allow the commissioner a public reporting role on himself or herself. Rather, it provides that the Director of Public Prosecutions will cover the general work of the commissioner in his or her annual report. So, I'm appointed to an office, I'm the commissioner of Canada elections, and I can't even report on myself. It's the Director of Public Prosecutions who reports on me.
Within a bureaucracy, where often reports are shared, things are nudged, things are nuanced, and so on. You can see the point I'm making about diminished transparency and accountability.
All in all, setting aside some of the increased penalties and that sort of thing, the commissioner's position has been significantly downgraded in the architecture of election administration and enforcement.
Based on my professional and research experience which dates back some 35 years, I would say that in a number of important respects, Bill is a step back. It is a regressive measure in the evolution of Canada's election law. If adopted in its present form, it can be expected to diminish accessibility to the vote, particularly for youth, because the education and information function will no longer be there, will no longer be part of the basics of election.
The bill could also weaken the fairness principle that lies at the core of the regulation of political finance and election spending that dates back to 1974 and was significantly enhanced under the Chrétien government, and also under the Harper government.
Finally, it will lessen transparency and accountability with regard to the role of the Commissioner of Canada Elections. The bill is flawed in a number of respects and in my view should not proceed unless amended on the matters that I mentioned and some of the other matters that have been pointed out by a number of the witnesses.
We are in the most unusual situation also, I would add, just in closing, of having a bill that is not only dividing political parties sharper than ever before, but has the incumbent Chief Electoral Officer opposed on a number of very major counts. This is unprecedented in the three decades and more during which I've been studying election law. It in itself is, I think, quite a worrying development.
Thank you for your attention.
:
I'm not quite sure what to do with one of the witnesses. I'll leave it for the moment.
Professor Mycoff, thank you so much for being available.
I, too, have had a chance to read your six-page piece called, “The Empirical Effects of Voter-ID Laws: Present or Absent?” I just want to make sure that I fully understand the import.
You just said that there's no direct relation and no evidence that voter ID cards affect turnout, turnout being your reference point, but throughout your piece, you're making comparative evaluations between other more significant factors and voter ID requirements.
You say that voter identification laws appear to be a much smaller piece than are other factors. You say, “While strict ID requirements have the potential to burden some members of the electorate, our analyses suggest that these numbers are small.”
You cite, “0.2% of potential voters claimed to have been excluded from voting due to ID requirements”. By the time you amalgamate that, those are real individuals, not just statistics.
You also say, “our question is whether these laws have significantly reduced turnout”.
Then you say, “Even if voter-ID laws do have pronounced empirical effects, once political interest is taken into account...”, etc., etc.
Can I just double-check that you want to stand by this claim that there's no direct relation, no evidence at all that there's some impact?
:
I think you might well be correct, but I just wanted to make it clear that it's different from saying there's no direct relation and no evidence.
The driving factor may well be the case that there are other factors, especially cumulatively, that might account for more. Our concern is that each individual has the right to vote, and that the particular impact in some groups, as you've said in your own language from a theoretical standpoint is:
the voters most likely to be negatively affected by voter-identification laws are those who are interested in voting, but do not know and or have the proper identification. This population may include groups such as first-time voters...or those whose IDs have recently expired,
—for example.
You also say, and I appreciate this, because I think it's a very balanced paper, and you're reporting your findings:
This is not to say that actually requiring a more strict form of identification is not on its face discriminatory; it is, and the laws deserve to be scrutinized. But, our question—
—your research question—
—is whether these laws have significantly reduced turnout.
Based on your analysis, you say no.
Our concern is there are multiple reasons we would be concerned with voter ID. Those include the fact that adding to the burden of any set of individuals, individuals on their own or groups of individuals, is itself a problem in our system, especially when there's no evidence of voter fraud, as opposed to other forms of gaming the electoral system to justify upping the ante in terms of voter ID requirements.
I just wanted to make it very clear that I have no objections to your conclusions. I just don't think they prove as much as I think my colleagues over there wanted them to.
May I simply ask whether you think this matters? You've emphasized, “we hypothesize that voters with higher levels of interest in politics are more likely to vote,”—I think that's probably a reasonable supposition—“and are less affected by voter-identification laws.”
Our concern is people who may not be all that engaged, who may only get engaged around election time. We have a system here whereby people can actually turn up on election day and vote, whereas in the U.S., I understand, unless things have changed, by and large you have to have registered in advance, if I'm not mistaken.
:
I'll be pleased to. I'll draw a distinction, though, between the support or otherwise of the Chief Electoral Officer and of other political parties.
On the latter, for decades it was the tradition and I would say probably an unwritten rule that changes to the Elections Act, even very major ones, were the subject of all-party consensus.
When the Election Expenses Act which came into effect in 1974 was passed, it occurred under a minority Parliament. The NDP held the balance of power. David Lewis was the leader at the time. All of this was the subject of my doctoral research. There were a number of very significant changes, including the threshold for access to candidate reimbursement, which were conditions of support that David Lewis and the NDP placed in front of the government.
If we flash forward, this began to break down, actually, under a Liberal administration, because in the face of the reforms that came into effect in 2004, the two parties that became the Alliance, as it then was, were opposed to the annual public funding allowances granted to political parties. I don't know how the vote proceeded at the time, but certainly in their public statements they were opposed.
The present government abolished these allowances, against the wishes of the other two political parties in the House of Commons. So in the last decade the all-party consensus tradition has been weakened.
Turning to the Chief Electoral Officer, it has been traditional that many of the amendments came from the reports of the Chief Electoral Officer, particularly on more technical issues: flaws or difficulties were noticed, he reported, and these were picked up as legislation was drafted, and so on. Usually the Chief Electoral Officer was consulted informally.
I realize there's a debate this time about the degree to which he was consulted on this. Apparently there was a meeting with that lasted a half hour, and Mr. Poilievre got rather bored with what Mr. Mayrand was saying because he felt it was all in the public record.
Whether this is true, I don't know, but there certainly is a lot on the record, based on Mr. Mayrand's testimony, that demonstrates there's quite a bit of light between him and the sponsoring minister on a number of very important matters in the bill, whether in the enforcement area or concerning the commissioner or on the issue of vouching, and so on. There's a long list there.
I know of no other example, even dealing with less important amendments, in which there was that much difference between the Chief Electoral Officer and the sponsoring minister.
:
Yes. I'm saying there are multiple digital identity systems in Canada. Think of them as intersecting Venn diagrams. There are these multiple circles. One is called a bank account, one is called a credit card, and one is called a health card, and they intersect. When you add them up and look at the part in the middle where they all meet, I suggest and propose to you that there are zero Canadians with zero digital identity.
First off, you can't get health care in this country without a health care card. I know, because I have actually been to my doctor's, but I forgot my card and I was sent home. I have arthritis, so I go to a doctor fairly frequently, and I was refused health care. Now, it was no big deal. I went home, got the card, and went back. But I believe that you cannot get health care without your health care card, every last one of us.
Aboriginal identity cards; I didn't even mention that, by the way. A new aboriginal identity card is being rolled out for 800,000 aboriginals. Ninety-six per cent of Canadians have bank accounts. I can go on and on. I've only scratched the surface of institutions that issue identity cards.
Every university issues a photo ID faculty card. I've been in many government buildings—I've lived here all my life—and for every government building, including Elections Canada in Hull, by the way, you cannot get into the building without a government photo identity card. Every employee of the Government of Canada has a photo ID card. That applies provincially, municipally, and so on. It just goes on and on.
There are dozens of digital identity cards, so anybody can get an identity card if they choose to.
:
Thank you very much for the privilege of coming before the committee.
I submitted a brief earlier. Tonight, I'll just touch upon several points that were contained within that presentation, and then I'd be pleased to answer any questions that might arise.
I start with the observation that there has been considerable decline of public trust and confidence in politics and democracy in Canada. A similar trend has been happening in established democracies. There are many long-term causes and short-term factors that have contributed to public disillusionment with the political process. I fear that both the process by which Bill was formulated and is being passed in Parliament and the substance of the bill will further weaken public trust and confidence in the integrity of the election process, the one democratic activity in which a majority of Canadians participate.
Sound electoral governance arrangements based on as much consensus as possible contribute in important ways to public trust and confidence in the election process and to democratic legitimacy.
Turning to the process of electoral law, on process I would observe that the Canada Elections Act is not ordinary legislation. It provides a foundation and framework for fair and free elections. Other countries have recognized that such fundamental laws should not be changed hastily and unilaterally by the governing party.
In the U.K., most election laws require advanced consultation with the national electoral commission. Usually this involves a review of draft bills with the commission officials to ensure that the proposed legislation is workable.
In New Zealand, the Electoral Act 1993 requires a supermajority of members of the House of Representatives to repeal or modify a list of eight key features of the election law framework. This provision ensures that there is some measure of cross-party support for those changes. This leads me to recommend that the bill be amended to provide for mandatory consultation with Elections Canada concerning future changes to the Canada Elections Act.
I also recommend that before the fixed-date election scheduled for 2019 that a comprehensive evaluation of the framework of election law and administration put in place by Bill be conducted by an all-party committee of the House of Commons.
Turning next to the mandate of Elections Canada, the proposal to restrict communications by Elections Canada to the mechanics of voting is wrong. Of the five other national election bodies that I have studied, none has such a narrow restriction on its communications activities. Informing Canadians on when, where, and how to vote is a core role of Elections Canada that the agency has always taken seriously. The agency did not unilaterally assume broader educational and outreach roles. On February 17, 2004, a unanimous motion was passed in the House of Commons calling on Elections Canada to expand its activities to ensure accessibility for disabled voters and to encourage younger Canadians to participate in the electoral process.
Politicians, political parties, and Parliament have the primary responsibility to promote a more vibrant democracy. Other groups and organizations within society also have responsibility to inform and engage Canadians. Elections Canada is one of those organizations that should be involved. Therefore, I recommend that if Parliament decides to reinforce the core task of Elections Canada by passing the new section 18, it should add a parallel provision that recognizes the right of the agency to study, report, and comment on the conditions within the domain of electoral democracy.
Moving the Commissioner of Canada Elections to the office of the Director of Public Prosecutions is the next topic. I've not heard compelling arguments nor seen strong evidence to justify this relocation. My understanding is that the commissioner acts independently of Elections Canada when conducting investigations and recommending prosecutions. The current location within the administrative framework of an officer of Parliament provides more assurance of independence from political pressures than the proposed location within a department headed by a minister. As part of a department, the commissioner will be restricted in his freedom to report on investigations and prosecutions.
There are other issues associated with the proposed relocation that are discussed in my brief. I recommend that the relocation of the commissioner function be dropped from the bill. If there is a perception that the commissioner needs more autonomy, this could be provided through amendments requiring structural and procedural separations inside Elections Canada.
My next topic is on adding to the tool kit of enforcement. Changing political practices and new technologies of campaigning require that a broader range of enforcement tools be provided to Elections Canada and the Commissioner of Canada Elections. Whether the commissioner is housed in Elections Canada or in the DPP, the commissioner needs the authority to compel testimony subject to judicial supervision.
In five provinces the CEO or an election commissioner has such power to compel testimony. Currently, most violations of the Canada Elections Act must be treated as criminal matters and processed through the courts. To achieve greater flexibility and fairness in the enforcement process, a broader array of tools should be included in the law.
The U.K. example is instructive. Back in 2009, the election law was amended to provide a range of civil penalties such as monetary penalties, stop notices, enforcement undertakings, and forfeiture orders.
Therefore, I recommend that Bill be amended to provide authority to the Commissioner of Canada Elections to compel testimony. Also, a non-legislative recommendation is that the procedure and House affairs committee develop, in consultation with Elections Canada, procedures to ensure due process to guide the use of compelled testimony and to develop a plan for a wider range of enforcement mechanisms for the 2019 election.
Turning to the control of election spending, Bill makes a couple of improvements to the rules on the raising and spending of political money. It imposes sensible restrictions on the use of loans to skirt the limits on donations. It imposes higher fines for overspending.
However, the bill also creates a loophole by exempting from ceilings on spending the costs of electronic communications with past donors for fundraising purposes. It is difficult to imagine that communications for fundraising purposes would not involve appeals for votes and other types of support, and could even include attacks on political opponents.
There is no conceivable way that Elections Canada, with its present authority, could monitor and enforce compliance with this provision. I recommend that the exemption for the cost of fundraising communications be dropped from the bill.
Turning to voter information cards and vouching, the proposal to eliminate VICs and vouching is wrong. No hard evidence of voter fraud has been presented. There are already controls on the use of these devices and more safeguards could be introduced if this were deemed to be necessary. Elimination, however, does not strike the right balance between upholding the constitutional right of Canadians to vote and the highly remote risk of voter impersonation.
Already, more and more election administration activities and campaign finance reporting takes place online. The legislation should anticipate a continuation of this trend, working toward a day when online voting becomes an option. Therefore, I recommend that instead of eliminating VIC and vouching, Bill should grant authority to Elections Canada to conduct pilot projects with online voter registration and authentication of voter identity with the findings and recommendations being presented to Parliament.
I'll depart a bit from my script, and briefly say that if this committee was looking for a principled compromise to ensure the right balance between accessibility and integrity in the electoral process, they might look to Manitoba. In that province, over the last two elections, a voter who appears at the voting booth with two types of identification, neither of which has an address on it, can still vote, if they sign an oath to the effect that they live within the constituency. It has worked well and there have been no problems. This might be a compromise the minister might consider.
There are two areas where, I think, the bill fails to move election law forward.
Political parties now collect a large amount of personal information about individuals. It's past time that the provisions of privacy laws were extended to political parties. It is also time that political parties developed, with the support of Elections Canada, codes of conduct that will guide the behaviour of their candidates, paid staff, and volunteers. This is more than a symbolic gesture. Codes can help political parties to comply with not just the letter but also the spirit of the election law.
Changes to the Canada Elections Act should not lead to real or perceived advantages for one political party, nor should they put the convenience of political parties ahead of the voting rights of all eligible Canadians. Research in other countries indicates that political attacks on election agencies and partisan involvement with election administration weaken public trust and integrity in the election process.
We have an enviable reputation in this country. Elections Canada is the longest standing independent and impartial election administration body in the world and we want to ensure that we have fair and free elections and they're perceived to be such.
Thank you very much.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair, and good evening.
My name is Yasmin Dawood and I'm an assistant professor of law at the University of Toronto. My areas of specialty are election law and constitutional law.
Two weeks ago my colleagues and I wrote an open letter to and the members of Parliament to express our profound concern that the fair elections act, Bill , if passed, would damage the institution at the heart of our country's democracy voting and federal elections. The open letter has been signed by over 170 professors at Canadian universities who study the principles and institutions of constitutional democracy, including 16 past presidents of the Canadian Political Science Association. This overwhelming and unprecedented level of support from democracy experts across the country is a measure of how damaging we think this legislation would be for the future of our democracy.
Our primary concern is that Bill would seriously undermine the integrity and fairness of the electoral process. Although we have multiple concerns, I'm going to focus briefly on four issues.
The first issue is on vouching. As Mr. Neufeld has testified to this committee, there is simply no evidence of a link between vouching and fraudulent voting. Although there are record-keeping errors associated with vouching, such errors do not justify the disenfranchisement of thousands of eligible voters. I would like to emphasize that the Supreme Court has made clear that incorrect record keeping of vouching does not amount to an irregularity that would overturn an election result. The charter protected right to vote is fundamental and may not be abridged on account of administrative mistakes.
The second issue is on the role of Elections Canada. Bill prevents the Chief Electoral Officer from engaging in citizenship education campaigns aimed at increasing voter turnout. While political parties undoubtedly play an important role in motivating citizens to vote, we think that Elections Canada, a non-partisan agency, plays a special role in reaching out to voters that political parties are less likely to target. Historically, political parties have not focused on younger citizens because of low turnout among youth, nor do they reach out to citizens who are unlikely to support them. We need a non-partisan agency like Elections Canada to reach out to all voters.
The third issue is on ensuring a level playing field. We are concerned that certain aspects of Bill create the actuality and appearance of a partisan bias in the electoral process. For example, Bill would exempt fundraising expenses from the spending limits for political parties. This loophole would increase the influence of money on politics, and it would be particularly beneficial for the party with the longest list of donors, which in this case happens to be the governing Conservative Party. Bill also provides that central poll supervisors would be selected from lists provided by the candidate of the party that won the district in the last election. This provision violates the norm that the administration of the electoral process should be strictly neutral.
Fourth is the issue of effective compliance. Bill fails to provide the commissioner with the power to compel witness testimony, an essential power that is required by the commissioner to effectively investigate electoral infractions. Bill also fails to require political parties to provide Elections Canada and the commissioner with receipts and supporting documentation about their election expenses. In addition, we are concerned that Bill would remove the commissioner's ability to speak with the public. Under the new confidentiality requirements of Bill , members of the public and members of Parliament would have no access to information about the commissioner's investigations into electoral infractions, such as the robocalls affair, unless charges are laid.
Finally, the process by which Bill was drafted departs from a long-standing political practice in Canada whereby electoral reforms were undertaken through widespread consultation with all the political parties and close collaboration with Elections Canada. We are deeply concerned that the unilateral process by which Bill was drafted will establish a new precedent in our country's political practices. Rather than providing a neutral structure for political competition, the rules of democracy will themselves become the battleground for partisan control. This political precedent will be deeply damaging to democracy as successive majorities in Parliament rewrite the electoral rules in an effort to gain a partisan advantage. We urge the governing party to consider the long-term consequences of its approach. It will hurt all the political parties and will diminish the strength, fairness, and vitality of our democracy.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Thank you to all of you for the invitation to appear before you tonight. It truly is a privilege for me to be doing this, so thank you.
I want to begin by congratulating you on both your openness to listening to the many diverse views you're hearing before you in this process and your willingness, I hope, to consider how to incorporate improvements meant to strengthen our democratic system and reflect our shared democratic values. Doing so will reinforce the value of the parliamentary process as well to Canadians.
The perspective I offer tonight is my own, based on personal engagement in elections, federal and provincial, as a partisan but also as a former deputy minister to the New Brunswick Commission on Legislative Democracy established by Premier Lord to examine and make recommendations on how to strengthen and modernize that province's democratic institutions and practices. The key focus of our work was how to bring about civic engagement and participation of New Brunswickers, particularly young voters, in the political and governmental processes. That's what I wish to focus on tonight.
Few issues are so critical to Canada's democracy as the conduct of elections. The passionate interest shown by many Canadians in the proposed fair elections act reinforces this notion. Beyond the fine print of what's in this bill, it is equally important that parliamentarians consider the core democratic values and principles of Canadians and determine whether and to what extent they are reflected in the fair elections act.
When it comes to how elections are run, these values include fairness, transparency, accountability, accessibility, and inclusiveness. While political parties and their candidates are the main practitioners of electoral democracy in our parliamentary system, they do not own it. We do as citizens and voters. These are not, I hope, idle words. There's a world of difference between a party-based view of elections and a citizen-based view of elections and how either would be reflected in an elections act.
Political parties are absolutely necessary features of our system. In many ways, they are the gatekeepers for the political process. They give voters a choice of views and candidates. They proactively engage with voters. They provide the basis for electoral legitimacy, necessary when forming a government. Strong parties are good for democracy. But political parties are, legitimately, self-interested organizations. They compete for the most votes, not for others but for themselves. A turnout for your party is paramount, not for the country overall.
A citizen-based view of elections takes the view that voter participation independent of party is an important democratic goal in itself, that our democracy is healthier and stronger if more citizens exercise their right to vote habitually. Only one player in the electoral process has this interest at its core, and that is the independent, non-partisan Chief Electoral Officer.
Strengthening, or at least maintaining, the role of Elections Canada in fostering voter knowledge and participation in elections is as basic as it gets when it comes to a responsible democracy such as ours. Subsection 18(1) of the current Canada Elections Act allows this to occur. The fair elections act amends this section, and would remove this public education and information role, replacing it with a much more minimal role on communicating just the basics of voting. This is a move away from the principles of a citizen-based voting system.
Accessibility to voting is a critical feature of turnout and participation in every election. Elections Canada needs to keep doing this, and will of course be able to do so under this bill, but the knowledge about elections and motivation in voting is equally important for the long-term health of our democracy. The steady decline in youth turnout over many elections is an alarming signal that our democracy is not reaching all those it should.
Recent elections have seen only about 40% of eligible youth ages 18 to 24 turn out to vote. There are several reasons for this, less interest and attachment to conventional politics, lack of knowledge of democratic institutions and processes, a general decline perhaps in political deference over many years, but the result is the same. A one-time non-voter is more likely to become a habitual non-voter. That is something that all of us, citizens and parties, have a shared stake in preventing, and it is something that this bill should worry about too.
Improving civic literacy, the knowledge that young Canadians have about political issues in our voting system, is central to fostering more inclusiveness and hence participation within it. Elections Canada has done this in the past by supporting, for example, Student Vote Canada, but it won't be able to in the future. By removing the ability of Elections Canada to engage with Canadians, especially young Canadians, not just on the mechanics of voting but on the importance of voting, we lose a key preventative tool and risk undermining the future health of our democracy.
I honestly do not believe any MPs on this committee or in the House of Commons want this. I urge you to consider how you might positively incorporate such a role into this bill as a continued long-term investment in our democratic system.
Thank you.
:
I'd like to start with you, Professor Thomas.
You mentioned a couple of things in your opening remarks. One was that it's always good to look at models in other countries and other jurisdictions when you're looking at changing your own laws. I forget what it was in regard to, but you mentioned the U.K. electoral commission.
I had noticed in some of the suggestions made by that commission that they had recommended looking at the expansion of the requirement for photo ID in order to be able to vote. They currently have it in Northern Ireland, and they were recommending expanding it as a way to combat voter fraud. I didn't see any indication there or any discussion of allowing vouching. They were recommending a photo ID system.
Now of course, that would be beyond what's being suggested here, because obviously there are a number of other ways you can create your identity. You obviously have the idea of the photo ID, but you could have two pieces of ID as well. Obviously, what they are suggesting would be beyond this.
I'm curious as to your thoughts. The report from the U.K. commission indicates that since 2003, when Northern Ireland had the requirement, there has been little evidence of voters being turned away from the polling station for presenting an incorrect form of identification.
They also indicated that they had gathered substantial evidence. They said:
We gathered substantial evidence during our review that the lack of a requirement for ID... is both an actual and a perceived weakness in the system.
I would be interested in your comments on that, based on some of the suggestions being made there and the comments they have made in their report.
:
Thank you very much for hearing me. I'm not as fast a reader as some of the others, so I'm just going to highlight some of our points. I understand that you have the full presentation.
Council of Canadians with Disabilities, CCD, is a national cross-disability organization with nine provincial, one territorial, and seven national disability member groups. Through CCD, Canadians with disabilities have been speaking out and taking their rightful place in Canadian society by causing the removal of barriers to participation. Approximately 3.8 million, or 13.7% of Canadians—we'll talk about that—15 years of age and older report a disability.
Thank you for hearing from the CCD on the barriers regarding Bill . We want to talk about four points that we feel are of great concern.
On the public education campaigns, unfortunately Bill ends the Chief Electoral Officer's power to implement information programs about the electoral process. Barriers, such as the lack of plain language information, Braille, large print, ALS-LSQ information for the hearing impaired and deaf, have prevented some persons with disabilities from being knowledgeable about the electoral process. Accessibility and inclusive public education campaigns enable people with disabilities to overcome information barriers and to promote participation. CCD recommends that the Chief Electoral Officer continue to have the authority to implement information programs.
The next is alternative voting process. The printed ballot is inaccessible to some voters. For example, voters with vision impairments cannot independently verify if a printed ballot is correctly marked. Adoption of electronic and telephone voting processes will overcome this barrier, hopefully, but will require testing. Bill proposes House and Senate approval of future tests of electronic processes. Currently, committee approval is sufficient. As additional approval requirements could hinder barrier removal, CCD recommends that only committee approval be required for the test of electronic voting systems.
Next is voter identification rules. We've heard quite a bit about that tonight. Bill 's proposal to eliminate vouching and prohibit the use of voter information cards, VIC, for verifying a voter's residence will disenfranchise voters who do not have full identification of their address. Persons with disabilities living in long-term care facilities and homeless people with disabilities will be among the disenfranchised because they experience barriers to obtaining necessary ID, not because it's not available, but they just can't get it. CCD recommends we retain the current safety net provided by the VIC and vouching.
On campaign contributions, more people with disabilities are seeking public office. People with disabilities experience a disproportionate level of poverty. CCD disagrees with the Bill exemptions that allow increased contribution from a candidate's personal funds because it will place less affluent Canadians at a disadvantage.
Finally, on enforcement, the Commissioner of Canada Elections should not work for the government of the day. To protect the fairness of the electoral process, CCD recommends that the Commissioner of Canada Elections report directly to Parliament.
Thank you for your time.
:
Mr. Chair, I'm glad you chose Mr. Brown first; therefore, there's always brilliance to my right.
Voices: Oh, oh!
Mr. David Shannon: Thank you very much for the invitation this evening.
My name is David Shannon. I live in Thunder Bay, Ontario. I had a spinal cord injury 32 years ago. That means I have had the benefit of experiencing many elections using a wheelchair. I'm also the executive director of a non-governmental organization that serves people with disabilities in Thunder Bay, Ontario. I'm here on behalf of the Canadian Disability Policy Alliance, which is a national collaboration of disability researchers, community organizations, and federal and provincial policy-makers aimed at creating and mobilizing knowledge to enhance disability policy in Canada.
Of course today I'm here to talk about disability policy and in particular some recommendations. I would submit that this is an opportunity for all of us to enhance the inclusion of persons with a disability.
When I talk about persons with a disability in Canada, I'm not talking in a vacuum. I'm not talking about an ideal or an idea. I'm talking about four million Canadians who are of an age to vote. In fact 4.4 million Canadians have a disability, and according to the latest statistic, four million are of voting age. It's a critically important bloc to access for any politically minded individual, and indeed to open the doors to greater democracy, which I believe is the purpose of this bill.
We have found, however, that obstacles to electoral involvement for persons with a disability are not limited to just inaccessible polling sites. The Elections Act has tried to address that. The Hughes decision at the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal tried to address that. But it goes beyond polling sites. It goes to meeting venues, campaign offices, and constituency offices. They are all central to the effective functioning of Canadian democracy. I want to talk about that. At the very fundamental level of our democracy, every party, every politician has to open the doors to meetings and campaign offices to guarantee that they have inclusive design.
Our research has shown that people with disabilities are 20% less likely to vote than those with a disability. That's ironic, however, that they're less likely to vote, because if you ask them, as our research also indicates, there is a greater urgency and desire among the disability community to vote than the rest of Canada. This leads to, within these 4.4 million Canadians, what is termed absent citizens. Therefore, meeting venues, campaign offices, and information materials are central to accessing these absent citizens.
A recent study conducted under the auspices of the Canadian Disability Policy Alliance surveyed candidates from the Ontario election campaign of 2011 to discover the extent to which campaign offices, meeting venues, party platforms, and official websites were accessible and inclusive toward their disabled constituency. Party leaders were polled to seek their position on disability issues and accessibility in their campaign and their platform.
The findings from this survey indicate there is a general lack of understanding of the imperative to achieve accessibility standards, not only of polling stations and booths, but also of political campaigns, if representative democracy in Canada is to include people with disabilities.
Of course that was a provincial election. I would not imagine that same error would visit itself upon any federal campaign.
The survey found that accessibility practices tended to be reactive instead of proactive, exceptional instead of inclusive. Electoral practices do not appear to have kept pace with the shift in policy and attitudes towards disability that has occurred. We've seen a shift in the past generation from 1981 to 2014 in the way in which the public views inclusiveness and includes persons with a disability, but political campaigns and politicians have not kept pace.
Mr. Chair, we therefore ask for your consideration to add a section under the general provisions of the bill known as the fair elections act.
We recommend: one, that the standing committee mandate campaign office accessibility in the legislation; two, that the fair elections act adopt and implement an accessibility standard for all campaign websites, offices, and meeting spaces during the federal election; three, that Elections Canada communicate with the individual candidates about the expectations of accessibility. We do have, by the way, a tool kit, which is a survey of how to make one's campaign offices accessible. Finally, Mr. Chair, we recommend that the Standing Committee on Procedure and House Affairs recommend enhanced and broadened funding through the enabling accessibility fund to help achieve greater accessibility during a federal election. In other words, this section can be implemented.
We believe this would help us lead to a much broader constituency and a voice for all Canadians.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Good evening, and thank you for inviting us to join this discussion tonight. My name is Corey Willard, and I'm a volunteer board member with the foundation that the forum is part of.
I'm going to touch on two things. I'm going to give you a brief overview of the program. I know many of you know Forum for Young Canadians; I see some familiar faces in the room. I'll also touch on two aspects of the proposed legislation that might affect our program and the youth who participate in it.
Forum for Young Canadians is a non-partisan program that offers Canadian youth a chance to learn about Canada's political system, and sit side by side with today's leaders, preparing themselves to become leaders tomorrow. Throughout their week in Ottawa, these youths participate in mock elections, learn about the pillars of Canada's democratic system, and most importantly, how to use their voice.
They represent the issues in their communities and provinces and learn from each other what the fabric of Canadian society is all about.
[Translation]
Their experiences begin months before they arrive and continue for months after they return home. We support them in continuing their engagement as active citizens. As young leaders, one of their roles is to return to their schools and community groups and inspire their peers to become active and engaged citizens.
[English]
Funded in part through the Department of Canadian Heritage's exchanges Canada program, the forum program also receives support from sponsors that include Elections Canada, the Canadian Association of Former Parliamentarians, the Churchill Society, the Canadian Club of Ottawa, and a host of other companies and organizations.
For the last 38 years, forum has been the flagship program for the Foundation for the Study of Processes of Government in Canada, a not-for-profit organization whose volunteer board of directors is comprised of notable Canadians from across the country.
We are proud of the outcome that a significant number of students who participate in forum return to Ottawa to complete their post-secondary education. They already know what they want to do. Some of them end up working on or around Parliament Hill. Many of the other students who participate in the program end up choosing to pursue their post-secondary education in another city or province, in part because of the impact forum has had on their interest to explore the different regions of our country.
The elimination of vouching would have a negative impact on these youths. Many of them are turning 18 and are eager to vote. Most of them are attending post-secondary education institutions away from their home town, and unfortunately, the reality is a lot of them don't end up changing their addresses for the time they are in school. I was a victim of that one.
[Translation]
Elections Canada plays a supporting role in our program. At every session, Elections Canada officials come and deliver the module of the program that relates to voting.
In addition to the presentation, Elections Canada supplies us with all the materials required to host a mock election. Throughout the year, Elections Canada plays a significant role in strengthening our ability to support our participants in motivating their peers to vote.
As a non-partisan organization, we are part of a network of other organizations whose role is to prepare the next generation of Canadian leaders and active citizens by providing them with the tools and information they need to remain true to the democratic process.
[English]
I'm sure it was not the intent of proposed section 18 of this legislation that organizations such as ours would no longer have access to support from Elections Canada to educate and inspire Canada's youth from a non-partisan perspective. However, we believe that would indeed be one of the unintended consequences.
On Friday when we received this invitation, we were in the process of saying goodbye to 146 youths from across Canada who gathered here in Ottawa last week for forum. We heard over and over and over again comments from students about how forum has made them realize the importance of becoming active and engaged citizens. I will share a few comments that were submitted to us last week prior to these students departing.
Danielle, from Manitoba, noted, “Before I came to Ottawa I thought I would never vote, now I will go home and count the days till I turn 18 and can vote and I’ll get all my friends to vote.”
[Translation]
Roya, from Ontario, said: “Voting is very important because people have the ability to choose who they believe is the right person to lead their country. Citizens must vote in order for their political leaders to reflect the interests of the population.”
[English]
Michael, from Ontario, said, “One of the most valuable and interesting parts of forum is the chance to debate political issues in a non-partisan environment. The election simulation and Elections Canada presentation both have the effect of showing students how these debates are decided in 'the real world'. The excitement generated by the elections at forum is incomparable and certainly makes the youth who participate passionate about exercising their democratic right.”
[Translation]
Katie, from Quebec, said: “I felt the information I heard during the election session provided me with what I need to know not only about how to go about voting but also why it's so important for me to vote so I could make a good decision on who to vote for and be able to do it.”
[English]
Megan, from Nova Scotia, said, “That won't be the last time I put my X to say who I think should run this country.”
[Translation]
On behalf of the Foundation for the Study of Processes of Government in Canada, please accept our thanks for the opportunity to present this evening.
[English]
I will conclude with the words of another participant of our program. “Visiting Parliament Hill means more than just witnessing history. It means looking at the future and knowing that this is potentially a place where some of us may create history. It goes beyond the magnificent carvings and walls and makes me most grateful to be part of such a beautiful nation.” That was from Dunja, from British Columbia.
[Translation]
We wish the committee every success in the task it has undertaken. We are now ready to provide you with any other information you may need.
[English]
Thank you.
:
—on that issue, but we're here to discuss Bill .
Mr. Willard, if I could turn my attention to you, please, I think, like every parliamentarian here, we've had dinners and meetings with young Canadians through the Forum for Young Canadians. They've been some of the greatest experiences I've ever had.
Unfortunately, on the last couple of trips to Ottawa, I haven't had any members from my riding, but those that I have met over the years, and I've been here for 10 years, I have found to be some of the most engaged, knowledgeable, enthusiastic, and industrious young people I could possibly have met. It has been a true pleasure for me.
I say this because I don't think there's ever a difficulty or a problem motivating that group of individuals, or young people like them, to vote. I think they fundamentally understand whether or not....
You gave the example of someone who, when she first came here, didn't think she would ever vote, but after leaving Ottawa said that she was now waiting for her 18th birthday. I think that almost would be the exception rather than the rule. I have found that most young people who come to the Forum for Young Canadians are absolutely motivated by the time they get here.
That being said, you talked about the need, in your opinion at least, to maintain the provisions contained in section 18 to promote voting among young people. As you would know, in Bill , we are suggesting that the primary role of the Chief Electoral Officer at Elections Canada should be to advertise and to promote how to vote, where to vote, and what identification is needed to vote. Studies have shown that most young people don't vote for the primary reasons that they don't know where or when to vote and they don't know what ID.... We're trying to focus on the how-tos rather than on the motivational factor. In fact, I suppose you could say that any advertising is, in effect, promoting the need to vote.
In your experience, or your opinion at least, if Elections Canada were to concentrate on simply advertising, and advertising significantly, informing Canadians in the lead-up to an election of the requirements for voting—the right ID to bring, how to vote, and where to vote—do you think that would have an effect on increasing voter turnout among young people, or do you think the advertising generally, trying to convince people that they should vote, would be a better way to go?
:
I just remind everybody that the Chief Electoral Officer spoke to how comparatively accurate the voter information cards are in terms of their being the most accurate piece of federal ID that exists and said that the fact that some people aren't on the register doesn't make them less accurate for those who receive them.
I'd also note that, although I stand to be corrected, I don't believe universities or law schools or whatever can issue attestation letters.
An hon. member: [Inaudible—Editor]
Mr. Craig Scott: No, that has to be with respect to those living in residence, but many students still use their parents' address for correspondence, so it's not as though that mechanism works. It's in residence that it's particularly useful.
For anybody who is living off campus, it's a very different thing. There is a whole bunch of reasons: you may not be on the lease; your driver's ID is from another province. I came up against these in recent elections; people who said that in fact they had been to the polls and couldn't put together the ID. They were university students, in fact, at the University of Toronto.
I was delighted, Mr. Brown, that you brought in an important new angle on the whole question of electronic voting, because the proposed section 18.1 in the bill, concerning alternative voting processes, singles out one form of alternative voting, and that is electronic voting, for a much higher threshold to be passed in order for the Chief Electoral Officer to engage in a test. It requires the prior approval of the Senate and the House of Commons.
The drafters even dared to put the Senate ahead of the House of Commons in this. I'm not sure how that happened.
The point is that the barrier to getting it approved is so much higher than for anything else.
You have brought the perspective of those with disabilities for whom paper ballots are a particular barrier, and I thank you for that, because I've been to this point thinking that it's something that would appeal mostly to youth, as an accessibility issue.
From my perspective, we have to be ready for the time when electronic voting will be secure and people will have the right comfort level. Elections Canada can't be so far behind the trend that it will take another 10 years to engage in electronic voting.
The most important point is that you said, “An inclusive and accessible balloting process would include the option for alternate telephone or electronic voting processes, which would allow for independent verification by people for whom print is a barrier.”
It's really important to note that Elections Canada, when they've been thinking about engaging in e-voting tests, are not saying that it is going to be for the whole system. It can actually be an enhancement to the system, in particular to make it more accessible for certain groups.
I'm wondering whether what I've said rings as correct to you and whether this is indeed something we should emphasize for an amendment.