:
Good morning, everybody.
We are here for the 135th meeting of the Standing Committee on Procedure and House Affairs. Typically, I remind witnesses—although I think Mr. Reid is well aware—that we put our earpieces, when not in use, on the stickers in front of us to protect the well-being of our interpreters.
Colleagues, we are here today on M-109, an instruction to the Standing Committee on Procedure and House Affairs regarding amendments to the Standing Orders, and on the study of Bill , an act to amend the Canada Elections Act. We will return to C-65 in the second hour of our affairs here today.
For the first hour, we have our colleague Scott Reid, the MP for Lanark—Frontenac—Kingston, with us. It's always nice when we have a colleague from the House of Commons join us in their capacity as a witness.
Mr. Reid, we very much look forward to hearing from you today, sir. Thank you for making yourself available to the committee. I'll turn the floor over to you for five minutes. If you feel like you need a little bit more time, that's not a problem. Then we will head into our opening rounds of questions.
With that, colleagues, we will begin.
[Translation]
Mr. Reid, you have the floor for five minutes.
I'm going to speak in English today, because I speak much faster in English than in French.
[English]
We'll all benefit if I get through this as quickly as I can.
The purpose of M-109 is to ensure that, in the future, it will be possible to amend the Standing Orders only with the consent of all recognized parties.
This guarantee would be achieved by amending the Standing Orders so that, when a debate on any future amendment to the Standing Orders is under way, the rules that can be used to limit debate, under all other circumstances, will not apply. Henceforth, when the subject being debated is an amendment to the Standing Orders, the following four rules would cease to apply: Standing Order 56.1(1)(b); Standing Order 57, which is the provision we normally mean when we use the term “closure”; Standing Order 61, which is also known as the “previous question”; and Standing Order 66(2)(c), which is what we usually mean when we refer to time allocation.
If you examine the text of M-109, you'll see that, in article (b) of the motion, the four subarticles designated by the lower-case Roman numbers (i), (ii), (iii) and (iv) limit the application of the four debate-limiting rules I just enumerated. Additionally, M-109 contains two additional subarticles, designated as (b)(v) and (b)(vi). These subarticles serve the complementary purpose of ensuring the Standing Orders cannot be amended via an opposition day motion or a private member's motion, unless there is all-party consent. Instead, if any private member's motion or opposition day motion amending the Standing Orders is approved in the House, it will be sent to the procedure and house affairs committee to be studied and referred back to the House within 75 days, which is exactly the same process being used for M-109.
If M-109 is adopted, the practical result will be that it will never be possible again, in the absence of all-party consent, for a mere majority in the House to force a vote on any proposed amendment to the Standing Orders.
Another word for “all-party consent”, of course, is “consensus”. In the absence of consensus, debate would simply continue as long as one side is willing to continue putting up speakers. Now, importantly, all-party consensus is not the same thing as a requirement for unanimous consent. I think a requirement for unanimous consent to change the Standing Orders—a Canadian version of medieval Poland's liberum veto—would be unwise.
Therefore, it's worth noting that, as a practical matter, the mechanism of delay by drawing out the debate is really only available to organized groups of a certain size. A group of MPs with a dozen members—which, under our rules, is the minimum size for maintaining recognized party status—is big enough, I think, to deny consent by proposing an endless series of subamendments and speakers. However, an individual MP or a handful of MPs do not have the stamina needed to unilaterally sustain a protracted debate on a motion that has the resolute support of the other 330-odd members of the House.
It's equally important to stress that M-109 would in no way limit the use of closure, time allocation or the previous question to any subject matter other than debates on the Standing Orders themselves.
M-109 was unanimously approved, as we all know, on June 19 of this year. I want to stress that this did not cause any standing order changes to come into effect. Rather, the motion had two effects: First, it instructed the procedure and house affairs committee “to undertake a study on the advisability of amending the Standing Orders” as outlined above; and second, it required that “the committee report its findings to the House no later than 75 sitting days following the adoption of this motion.” This means, in practical terms, that the committee has until late February to submit a report to the House.
Now, if committee members wish, I can advise them as to what I'd suggest the committee's report might say. My suggestion is based on the way this committee dealt, 10 years ago, with a similar motion I authored, one proposing to amend the Standing Orders to change the way the Speaker of the House of Commons is elected—a change ultimately adopted by the House.
Mr. Chairman, that concludes my remarks, and I'm at the disposal of the committee.
:
Yes. I mean, time allocation would not have come into existence, at least not in its current form, without the use of closure, and closure would not have come into existence without the use of the previous question. As to the previous question, that's something we inherited from the British. I'm not exactly sure when, but we did so pre-Confederation.
Yes, the tendency has been that—and this should surprise nobody—a government is motivated to want to restrict the ability to protract debate when it's finding the debate is too protracted, which, by definition, means at a time when the opposition is attempting to draw out debate.
I've gone to some lengths, both in my remarks in the House and today, to avoid commenting in some sort of general way on the merits of time allocation or closure. I was a deputy government House leader for 10 years, so I was part of a government that used closure and time allocation on occasion, and some would say on more than one occasion, so I'm not trying to do that. However, when it comes to placing further restrictions on the House's ability to debate and conduct business and slow things down for the purpose of giving proper examination, regardless of the partisan stripe of who's in office at that time, that is, I think, not the direction we want to head in.
Everything about our system is designed to allow more debate to occur. That's why we have three readings on legislation. That's why we have committee hearings at which amendments can be suggested. The House essentially divides itself up into smaller bodies so that it can do multiple pieces of business at the same time. That's why we have two houses of Parliament instead of just one. We could be unicameral, as all the provinces are, but I think it's actually wiser to go in the direction that has been employed at our federal level and in all state legislatures in the U.S. and in all state legislatures in Australia with one exception, which is to be bicameral.
In general, being slow and deliberate in your actions is reasonable. There are times when it's okay to move more quickly and to suspend the rules. That happened during COVID, for example. When the House was recalled, there were lengthy, all-day hearings—I think it was on March 20, 2020—on suspending the Standing Orders.
I remember I came to the House intending to deny unanimous consent when I thought that was what was going to happen, but once it became clear there had to be discussions, the government and the opposition parties were able to cobble together something that ultimately was, I think, an improvement over what might initially have gone through.
You can, when there's a need, find a way of getting to these things quickly—maybe somewhat messily, but quickly.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair. Through you, I'd like to thank Mr. Reid for being here with us today.
I want to start by saying that I, of course, support this motion and what Mr. Reid is trying to get to.
One area I wanted to check with Mr. Reid, who has much more experience than I do in this, is that there is no reference to Standing Orders 51(1), 51(2) and 51(3), which are about the requirement that, “Between the 60th and 90th sitting days of a Parliament on a day designated by a minister of the Crown...[the] House take note of the Standing Orders and procedure of the House and its committees”.
Basically, this is when we have the opportunity, once every Parliament, to have a wholesome discussion about the Standing Orders and to make recommendations. In Standing Order 51(2), we reference the expiration of proceedings deemed referred to committee.
I want to get your opinion on whether M-109 would need to encompass this part or whether this could stay as a stand-alone.
:
I don't think M‑109 needs to deal with this. M‑109 deals with the expiration of debate resulting in something coming to a vote. I believe what happens here is that, upon the expiration of debate, the item simply drops from the Order Paper. It's the opposite problem. Sometimes you want to be able to sustain debate on things because you think you could achieve a result.
What I'm proposing is basically to make it less easy to achieve a result.
Sherry, I'm cheating, and I'm going back and answering one of Michael's questions here through twisting slightly what you asked me. There's the whole idea of delay versus getting on with business quickly and the balancing act that's involved. You do have to be able to get on with business, obviously, but when we have a situation where there's an actual tie vote in the House of Commons, it's interesting what happens in that situation. The Speaker breaks the tie, but the Speaker doesn't stand up and say, “I've thought it over and I like this piece of legislation, so I'm voting for it.” What the Speaker says....
I remember the first time this happened when Peter Milliken was in the chair, he knew that he might have to break a tie one day, so he had a little piece of paper in his pocket, ready for that moment, and he pulled it out and he said that the precedent is that, when the Speaker is breaking a tie, the Speaker always does so in a way that continues the debate on the belief that it might be possible to achieve the necessary level of support, which of course is 50% plus one. Therefore, if it's an item at second reading, the Speaker votes in favour so that it can go forward. If it's an item at third reading—this is obviously a reference to bills—the Speaker votes against it, rather than causing it to leave the House and move on. I think that is the guidance here.
That being said, I think your underlying question is this: Could we beef up the Standing Orders with reference to the debates on the Standing Orders or the process for reviewing the Standing Orders? I agree, and I think something that we don't have room for here, at least it's not stated explicitly, is dealing with practices that are not part of the Standing Orders—so the practices of the House. That's all the stuff that you find in O'Brien and Bosc, which is all about our conventions and practices. I think we should spend some time looking at that.
I think it would be helpful, for example, right now, if we could come to a clearer agreement on what constitutes parliamentary language and what constitutes unparliamentary language, so that we can be clear on what the naughty words are and what the naughty words aren't. Also I think it would be helpful if we could have greater clarity for all of us on this thing we say where you can't do through the back door that which you can't do through the front door. I think a clearer understanding of what that is would be very helpful.
It would mean, when the Speaker stands up and says that's out of order or when the Speaker declines to do so, there would be more legitimacy. We would all say what he or she is doing we support, even if we didn't get what we wanted on the point in question. There would be greater support for the Speaker's actions. That's the definition of legitimacy.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I'm delighted today that we're discussing a substantial amendment to the Standing Orders, in connection with which I was personally insulted. We have worked many hours on the Standing Committee on Procedure and House Affairs. The Bloc Québécois tabled a dissenting report. That said, there were a multitude of recommendations on which consensus could be reached.
It's understandable that, in an exceptional case like the COVID-19 pandemic, extraordinary measures were taken. But when it's all over and we have to make a major amendment to the Standing Orders of the House, I'm delighted that it's being tabled today. People and my fellow citizens ask us what our committee is for when, basically, decisions are made behind the scenes by the House leaders. I'll tell you something: There was no consultation between them, and that's unacceptable.
My question is this: Is this proposal going to guarantee that there will be no fast-tracking or shenanigans so as to ensure, when we talk about the Standing Orders of the House, that this won't happen again?
:
It is the dream, Mr. Chair.
I, too, am in favour of this. It's very nice to have this kind of conversation. I think it brings out the policy wonk in all of us and our deep-rooted geekiness and love for this stuff. I know it does for Sherry anyway.
I can't help but think of where we are now. On the changes that you're talking about making to those Standing Orders, I do agree. They are the rules that govern us all, so we need to be a part of the decision on how they're made.
Again, within the context of what's happening now and the standstill we find ourselves at, this would add an additional tool for that gamesmanship, for that seizing of Parliament or for the filibusters that occur. Have you thought about that in any way in terms of the potential negative use of, ideally, a really positive idea?
:
I've tried to constrain it as narrowly as possible, so it really only deals with changes to the Standing Orders themselves.
I think there is a valid parallel with the protracted debate that's been going on now in a very narrow sense, a very narrow but important sense, which is this: If you want to see what in the future a debate would look like in an attempt to amend the Standing Orders that did not have all-party support, then what's going on in the House of Commons is a pretty good example of what it will look like. There would be some kind of deadlock.
The point is to not cause that deadlock to occur. Rather, since it's obvious that it would happen, it's to make the government more.... Since one assumes it would normally be the government that's proposing changes to the Standing Orders, and most often a majority government, it would make it necessary for them to make compromises. They might not get all they would want.
No change would occur because of this with regard to any debate on any subject other than the Standing Orders. Of course, what's happening in the House right now is not a debate on the Standing Orders. It's a debate on an order the Speaker made.
:
It's an interesting question. Canada has veered back and forth between minority and majority governments. I was mostly thinking about the need to protect ourselves in the event of a majority government. It seems to me that the greatest procedural concerns are in existence when there's a majority government.
I also tried in this to make it possible to amend the Standing Orders via a private member's motion, which of course is what we're talking about doing today, only if the same rules are respected. You can't do an end run and produce a private member's motion on changing the Standing Orders, have it adopted after two hours, vote and have it go into effect. That could be done. That could be an end run. In theory, it could be done by anybody, but I suspect it could be done most effectively by having a government backbencher move a private member's motion to completely change the Standing Orders in whatever way the government wants. You have two hours of debate and it's through. That was a hole I was very anxious to plug, actually.
Lindsay, here I'm kind of cheating and using your question to answer a question that you didn't ask. I do think that the proper way, when a private member's motion contemplates changing the Standing Orders, is to have that motion, if adopted, automatically directed to this committee for whatever hearings seem appropriate and then referred back to the House after a set period of time. The motion suggests 75 days.
At that point, it would still be possible, if there was not consensus, for that concurrence debate to be dragged out. Alternatively, if at the committee a consensus has been achieved—there's no better place to achieve consensus than here, and we'd all get input from our House leaders—it seems to me that this is a good way of ensuring that ideas can bubble up through the private members' system.
If they have flaws, those flaws can be.... Sometimes they're not attempts at force majeure. They're attempts at doing something with good faith, but something's been missed in the details. It's a good chance to catch it.
To pick up on part of the line of questioning put by Ms. Mathyssen, I'm wondering if you could clarify, Mr. Reid, that if this motion were adopted and the Standing Orders were changed accordingly, and there was an attempt to change the Standing Orders when there wasn't consensus, pursuant to convention, it theoretically could result in protracted debate in the House.
In terms of how that would impact other business of the House, could you clarify that the debate would take precedence in the time of concurrence, but thereafter it would not take precedence? It would only be debated at the adjournment of government business and, therefore, would not impede the government from moving forward other pieces of legislation.
:
The answer to your question is that you've summarized it exactly right. It would not wind up gumming up the business of the House.
Also, if the government insisted on trying to push through a set of standing order changes that were opposed by the opposition parties, what would happen? It would be this endless debate, but of course the government wouldn't try this. Since it's obviously pushing against an immovable object, it would recognize that it's necessary instead to go back and compromise on the substance of the standing order changes. That's in fact what would happen.
That is exactly what happened in the example I gave from March 2020. Realizing that their initial proposal to change the Standing Orders would not be met with success, the government House leader at the time, , stood up and simply asked the Speaker if they could suspend proceedings while the House leaders met to work out changes.
That's what happened. It took all day, but it wasn't endless. It took a day to sort out a very complicated series of changes. They included not just standing order issues but also passing the CERB legislation.
That's what would actually happen. There would be negotiations, I think mostly behind closed doors, with the House leaders, which of course is already part of our routine. Every Tuesday the House leaders meet, or should meet, to discuss all kinds of business that, if conducted in a more formal venue, would otherwise be very time-consuming.
:
The first two examples you cited—the McGrath commission and the one under the Chrétien government—involved having a report done up on the assumption that some detailed research was required. It's a subject that requires detailed work.
With regard to the motion to change how the Speaker is elected, what happened on that occasion.... This, I think, is the model that could work in this situation. It was a private member's motion. It was moved by me and sent to this committee. The committee reviewed the proposed standing order changes and then it wrote back. I just happen to have its report right here, as a matter of fact. The 21st report of the procedure and House affairs committee stated:
The Election of the Speaker is a matter for all Members to decide. The Committee does not oppose nor endorse motion M-489 brought forward by Mr. Scott Reid and feels that the entire membership of the House of Commons should have the opportunity to vote on whether or not to change the Standing Orders in the manner suggested by M-489.
In order to accomplish this purpose of having a vote in the House, the Committee recommends that Standing Order 4 be amended as follows:
What followed was the suggested motion to change the House standing order.
The point about all this was that it allowed the members to make the decision. What actually happened in the House was that it was a completely free vote and every single party in the House divided—even the Green Party. At least one member of the Greens, the Bloc, the NDP and also the Liberals and the Conservatives went on either side. The result was that it passed by some number, obviously. I can't remember the exact number. I think that's a good model here.
Thanks, Mr. Reid, for being here.
I note that we had some good, nerdy PROC-related discussions in the past on the code of conduct for members of Parliament when we did some work on that, which was overdue. I appreciate your being here. I appreciate your putting forward M-109 and the chance to engage with you on this.
I note that Mrs. Romanado brought up your work in 2019 with Frank Baylis and, I think, another group of MPs at the time that put forward some pretty sweeping changes to the Standing Orders. That's kind of the end run, almost, that you described, which is kind of interesting. You kind of took that path in trying to change the Standing Orders through a private member's motion that was pretty sweeping, some of which I agreed with, like the parallel debating chamber. I'm not saying I wouldn't have necessarily supported those changes, but you did so in a way that you're now trying to prevent with this motion.
Are you kind of having a moment of conscience here, where you're trying to prevent your former self from what it was maybe inclined to do back then?
I mean that in jest a little bit.
In all fairness, that was not my motion. That was Frank's motion, which I supported. I think what Frank was up against, if memory serves correctly, was that we were right at the end of a Parliament and it was going to be hard for him to get it through. I think that was what was driving him. Anybody who's ever had a private member's motion or bill that comes up toward the end of a Parliament knows that feeling. I have sympathy for what he was trying to do.
I think that in practice, he was biting off a very large chunk and it would have been difficult to deal with it all. To give the proper.... With something like setting up a parallel chamber, you really have to sit down and look at the other places that have done it—the Australians and British—and see how well what they proposed works. That was not the only subject matter. There were a number of other things he had in there.
The motion that I proposed that dealt with the election of the Speaker was a narrower topic. It was using the preferential ballot for electing the Speaker. Initially, I had this idea that we would put this forward, it would be debated and then the House would adopt it. It was in the process that wiser heads than my own directed and said that this really ought to go to the procedure and House affairs committee. In retrospect, they were 100% right. It was helpful to see what other jurisdictions had done. We were not the first ones to try this. The British do it in the House of Commons and in the House of Lords as well. That was very informative and useful.
:
The answer is that nothing I'm proposing would preclude whipped votes. In fact, I think they likely would be whipped votes in many cases. You know, what I've suggested here is a method that would, if the parties agree, lead to a free vote, but it could be a whipped vote. Nothing that happened in the motion I read, or the report from the committee 10 years ago, precluded parties from holding whipped votes if they wanted to. That's an internal matter.
Obviously, when you get all-party consensus, by definition you're saying that the party leadership and the party caucus, through whatever internal mechanism they have, decided as a whole to say either “we'll have a free vote on this” or “we'll have a whipped vote”.
Presumably, the key point is that the whipped vote, if there is one, is in favour. If one party says they're having a whipped vote against it, then you'll get all those speakers. If we're voting in favour, then many people will choose not to participate in the debate. There'll be no need for them to do so.
What will remain with me in fact is, among other things, a comment. For me, for a substantial regulation, it's necessary that it be a free vote. At the same time, it makes me wonder about something. Honestly, every legislator….
When you look at what's happening elsewhere in the world, they're all free votes. I hope the MPs here are really okay with partisan votes, because otherwise, people watching us are going to tell us that's why there's cynicism towards politics.
Of course, I welcome a free vote. I also want it to be consensual. I even dare to hope that we could go even further and keep parliamentary tactics and strategies, but in a slightly more….
I went through a 44-hour parliamentary filibuster. That was really something. Going through what we're going through makes no sense to the people who need us.
That was my comment. If you want to respond, you have one minute.
I don't have any comments to make about the processes that are going on right now in Parliament, in the House.
On the question of free votes, some people think that in the Parliament of Canada, all votes are forced votes, that votes are absolutely under the control of the respective parties and that MPs serve only to do whatever is asked of them. I don't think that's the reality.
In a Parliament under the Westminster model, parties have positions determined by conventions. For example, if there's a vote on the budget and the financial package and you're part of the political party that forms the government, you'll vote in favour of those measures. If you're in opposition, on the other hand, you'll vote against them. That's part of our system.
Private members' bills make room for individual ideas. I think free voting in this place is a very important part of our political system here.
:
I think the most important thing is that people like me, who are trying to change the rules.... You are dealing with an institution that is several hundreds of years old. The Canadian Parliament has roots that go back to 1791, and before that at Westminster for centuries beyond that. People like me understand that we should be making modest adjustments. We're not revolutionaries. There are other places where you can be a revolutionary more effectively.
We're dealing with the Standing Orders. You say I'm a small part of a long continuum or stream. I should keep them as small as possible and let the conventions that are evolving, and generally evolving in the right direction, I believe, on the whole....
We're more inclusive, for example, of mothers and nursing mothers in the House of Commons than was true when I came here a quarter of a century ago. There are a zillion other examples. We have rules on harassment now that we didn't have in the past. I could think of more examples, but I'd run out of time.
I think we're heading in the right direction on our conventions for the most part. We should only adjust on a limited basis through statutory change. That's the kind I'm considering.
[English]
Maybe what we can do here, colleagues—as I'm getting the sense that there is some agreement here—is just save that for the very end, because once Mrs. Romanado gets the floor she has a couple of questions.
Mr. Berthold, we'll come back to that, before Mr. Reid leaves, to just get consensus from the committee that they do, in fact, want to hear...and to go to the committee business aspect of that. We don't need to use your time to do that. We can come back, of course, because I just want to allow for some discussion before we—
:
Colleagues, I feel like I've returned to second-year political philosophy class today. It was a very fruitful discussion.
I went around the table briefly. There seems to be agreement that we have another meeting on M-109 to invite the House administration and potentially others. However, what I did hear from colleagues is that there is a desire to make sure that Bill is tended to before we call another meeting on M-109.
I'm looking around. I feel as though head nods are telling me that there's an implied majority here. If colleagues want to vote, we can do that. There's a majority that says yes. Is that clear to everybody?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
The Chair: I'll work with the clerk to make sure that we find time in the calendar. Please make sure that you submit witnesses beyond House administration for that one meeting.
Other than that, Mr. Reid, thank you very much for availing yourself to the committee and for your thoughtful insights today.
Colleagues, we have a couple of witnesses for our next round online. We're going to have to briefly suspend in order to transition over. We'll be back in a few minutes for our next hour on Bill .
:
Colleagues, welcome back.
I see that we have Mr. Barlow and Ms. Barron here, so welcome to PROC, colleagues.
We are continuing our study on Bill , an act to amend the Canada Elections Act.
The witnesses appearing today are those we had slated to appear last week, but the affairs of the committee made it such that we weren't able to hear from them at that point, and we're going to try that again.
I'd like to welcome, from Apathy is Boring, Samantha Reusch, the executive director. Appearing as an individual, we have Daniel Mulroy, lawyer, who is appearing by video conference. From the Indo-Caribbean Educators Network, we have Peter Deboran, retired principal and member of the steering committee, who is also appearing by video conference.
Each witness will have upwards of five minutes. We'll begin with Ms. Reusch, followed by Mr. Mulroy and Mr. Deboran, to give open statements. We will then go into lines of questioning from members of each political party.
With that, Ms. Reusch, I turn the floor over to you.
Good afternoon, members of the committee.
My name is Sam Reusch. I am the executive director of Apathy is Boring. Founded in 2004, we're the largest national non-partisan organization that engages young Canadians aged 18 to 34 in our democracy.
We're proud to work with youth from all sides of the political spectrum. It's not about who they vote for but rather that they participate in the democratic process and have their voices heard on the issues that matter most to them, including the economy, housing, equality and affordability.
I'm here today to express support for several amendments included in Bill , while also providing a real-world perspective on how to improve this bill to increase voter turnout and trust in our institutions amongst youth.
First, I want to address the proposed amendments related to on-campus voting. We know from our work across the country that, when young people are given accessible and convenient ways to participate in Canada's democratic process, they're more likely to vote. On-campus polling stations also provide meaningful opportunities for student organizations to engage young electors on campus. Importantly, this sends a powerful message to Canadian youth that their vote matters, something that is essential to reducing motivational barriers to participation.
Second, Apathy is Boring also strongly supports the proposed amendments targeting election interference. Further, we support the latest recommendations by the Chief Electoral Officer that call for expanding the current foreign interference measures to apply at all times.
Deceptive campaigns that manipulate and distort public opinion harm Canada's democracy and must be banned. When hidden resources are used to mislead, divide and push agendas without Canadians' knowledge, Canada's democratic process is undermined and our collective trust in institutions is put at risk. This is a risk that we cannot afford.
Importantly, this is not an issue of freedom of speech. It's a matter of removing the ability of specific actors to deceptively influence our elections directly or to finance those activities furtively. Making disinformation that seeks to undermine or influence our elections illegal and prohibitively costly is a crucial first step to addressing this risk. Youth have a huge stake in preserving our democracy and perhaps especially in our capacity to engage in genuine democratic discourse in our increasingly digital world. Moreover, we must increase awareness of this subject amongst Canadians through transparent and effective oversight and enforcement to underscore the serious nature of safeguarding our elections.
Last, while we commend the work undertaken to date to improve the Canada Elections Act and Canada's democratic process, let me close my remarks by providing a final recommendation to further improve the system under which we collectively operate towards a more inclusive, resilient and informed democracy.
While Bill directs Elections Canada to further study a three-day voting period, we recommend expanding the scope of this recommendation to weekend voting, as examining both in parallel would be the most efficient use of government resources and could assess the impact in both urban and rural Canada.
Indeed, research suggests that holding elections on weekends could increase voter turnout. Weekend voting addresses a prominent barrier, lack of time, cited by one in four non-voters as the reason they didn't vote in the 2019 election.
This lack of time has only been exacerbated by the cost of living crisis that Canadians are facing. Youth are one of the largest groups of non-voters and, in the most recent survey data, 78% believed that weekend voting would make it easier for them to vote. By prioritizing weekend voting, we would ensure that every citizen has the opportunity to exercise their right to vote, regardless of their schedule or other commitments.
Thank you for your time and consideration. I look forward to your questions.
Good afternoon, committee members.
First, I'd like to thank the committee for the invitation to make today's submissions, and I would give a particular thank you to those who aided in the rescheduling of today.
My name is Daniel Mulroy, I am here in my capacity as a human rights and constitutional lawyer and as a disability rights advocate. I am also here on behalf of my client, Mr. Dean Steacy, to address the accessibility of voting for persons with disabilities.
Through my brief submission, I'll introduce Mr. Steacy and his experience as a disabled voter, as well as the legislative mandate that requires Elections Canada to explore accessible electronic voting options to accommodate disabled Canadians. I will also request that this committee consider telephone voting as a viable and secure means of accommodating and franchising disabled voters.
Mr. Steacy—who intended on being here today but due to accessibility issues with the Zoom link will be viewing through ParlVU—has voted in every provincial and federal election since turning 18. From 1976 through to 2003, he was able to cast his ballot secretly, meaningfully and independently in accordance with his rights guaranteed under section 3 of the charter.
However, in 2003, Mr. Steacy permanently lost sight in both of his eyes. Since losing his sight, he's lost the ability to secretly, meaningfully and independently cast his vote in federal elections. Mr. Steacy's experience is not unique. Arguably, the most fundamental barrier for persons with disabilities is the exclusive reliance on the paper ballot and the unwillingness to adopt solutions based on available, accessible and secure technology. Allowing these barriers to continue puts Canada in violation of human rights, the charter and its international obligations pursuant to article 29 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.
Mr. Steacy is currently in the final stages of launching a charter challenge against the Canada Elections Act, alleging violations of sections 3 and 15 of the charter, as it denies persons with disabilities the opportunity to meaningfully participate in the electoral process and discriminates against disabled electors.
I am here today on his instructions to exhaust all avenues before returning to the courts.
Elections Canada has long recognized the existence of discriminatory barriers in our elections process, and since 1998, it has been aware, one, that technology is essential to accessible voting and, two, that telephone voting is the most viable and secure option.
Parliament has also provided Elections Canada with a clear mandate to explore electronic voting options.
In 2014, section 18.1 of the Canada Elections Act was enacted, requesting that the Chief Electoral Officer devise, test and study an alternative electronic voting process for use in future elections with Parliament's approval. Despite this mandate, no alternative voting process has been tested or proposed for adoption by Parliament, to my knowledge.
Further, in 2018, section 18.1 was amended through the inclusion of subsection 18.1(3), which states, “The Chief Electoral Officer shall develop, obtain or adapt voting technology for use by electors with a disability, and may test the technology for future use in an election.” It also added subsection 18.1(4), which provides that voting technology used for the inclusion of disabled electors needs only the approval of the responsible “committees of the Senate and of the House of Commons” for its use in future elections. However, the Chief Electoral Officer has not developed, obtained or adapted any such voting technology nor sought approval for its use in a federal election.
It is unacceptable that removing the major barrier to inclusive, independent and confidential voting by persons with disabilities has not been accomplished, despite the clear mandate handed to the Chief Electoral Officer 10 years ago and the information being available to Elections Canada for the last 25 years.
Telephone voting stands as the most secure, viable and accommodating voting procedure available, and it would represent an enormous step forward for individuals facing informational barriers, literacy barriers and transportation barriers and for those with visual barriers, like Mr. Steacy.
We respectfully ask this committee to review and report on whether Elections Canada has fulfilled its legislative mandate under section 18.1 and to report on the efficacy of telephone voting as an accommodation that will enable persons with disabilities to exercise their democratic rights on an accessible and equal basis.
Thank you very much.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and everyone. Thank you so much for your kind reinvitation to present to you today on behalf of ICEN, the Indo-Caribbean Educators Network. I'm here about the concerns of ICEN vis-à-vis our letter in support of amendments to Bill .
As you are all well aware, Canadian society has come a long way in recognizing the basic human rights of each of us, starting with the legal status of women, Canadians of African heritage, indigenous rights, queer rights, gender-expression rights and so on. As we have progressed, there has been a focus on recognizing peoples' lived experiences as a way to, if not eliminate, then at least ameliorate the effects of discrimination and exclusion of marginalized individuals and groups of people in our society.
Despite this, there's little information available about the peoples of the Caribbean diaspora in Canada. We know about specific countries there—for example, Jamaica or Guyana or Guadeloupe—but what is not known is that these countries comprise highly multicultural populations and that peoples on the subcontinent of India before partition make up the largest or the second-largest ethnic group in many of these countries. This is due to the colonial expansion of the English, French and Dutch empires, for example, which forced the migration of Indian workers, starting from the very early 1800s to the early 1900s. These peoples have contributed immensely to the cultures, languages, foods, politics, economies and the arts of each of the countries they were brought to.
In Trinidad, for example, where my family is originally from, the largest ethnic group is actually of Indian ancestry. The second-largest is of African ancestry. The culture is infused with strains of Portuguese, Spanish, Chinese, Syrian, Lebanese, Jewish and the last of the indigenous peoples, running through the heart and the history of the peoples of this island, which, for decades, was known as the most multicultural country in the world. That honour was bestowed on another country in the 1970s, and we're all, I believe, the richer for it.
These hybridized peoples of Trinidad have successfully exported calypso; soca, a blend of African and Indian musical traditions; chutney; and delicious curried chicken rotis and doubles to the rest of the world. It is my hope that, if you have never tried a good Trini roti, you will find a way to do it soon.
That said, the ancient country they came from, India, has a cultural and religious tradition that has been dated objectively back as far as 8,000 years ago. At its height, around the years 1500 to 3000 BCE, it produced vast works of literature, including the world's longest epic poem, the Mahabharata, dwarfing other epic poems hailing from Greece and Rome.
Prior to European colonization, India was the richest country on earth for well over a thousand years, with a GDP comprising almost one quarter of the world's GDP combined. Therefore, it will not surprise you to know that the highly developed cultural and religious traditions of classical India have endured in the practices of its peoples wherever and however they went. The Indian diaspora, whether in Mauritius, Singapore, South Africa and throughout the Caribbean, has contributed to and influenced the countries it has found itself in via its foods, music, dress and religions.
Hinduism, a religion that does not seek to convert, is the third-largest religion in the world after Christianity and Islam. This is why we find it necessary to entreat you today. Although we Indians from the Caribbean are a minority group within the Caribbean and more so in Canada, we wish to share with you that Diwali, a major holy day, is practised, observed and celebrated by Hindus in every country they have shared their culture with.
Diwali, known as the festival of lights worldwide, is nationally recognized and celebrated across countries such as Trinidad and Guyana in the Caribbean, in Mauritius, Malaysia and Singapore, and in India, Nepal and other countries across the world. In other words, the whole country celebrates Diwali, not only people who identify as belonging to the Hindu tradition.
Diwali holds immense significance for the Hindu, Jain and Sikh communities and much of the Buddhist community, and symbolizes the triumphs of good over evil, deliberation over impetuousness and insight over ignorance. Diwali also marks the Hindu new year for some communities, thus making it a blessed occasion for new beginnings. In northern India, it is usually a five-day celebration. It is a time for families and friends to come together in celebration, reflection and prayer.
To provide some context of ICEN's involvement, I wish to share that—
In other words, what I'm trying to say is that we are here on behalf of the many people who celebrate within their cultures across this country of ours. Quite frankly, we have found in the past that our electoral days have been set on Diwali. For example, in 2022, there was consternation across the whole of southern Ontario, with hundreds of thousands of communities unable to actually go to the voting process because they had to choose between their faith and their civic duties.
We are saying that, while Canada is justifiably proud of its tradition as a multicultural country, we ask all of you, we urge all of you, to look to set future dates for elections with a sensitivity and a respect to the many thousands of Hindus and other multicultural communities who will be observing Diwali in 2025. As you move forward in the future, please take a look at other religious traditions that are just as important in our multicultural society as those who practise the Christian and Jewish faiths.
Thank you so much for your time.
Thank you to our witnesses for being with us this afternoon.
Mr. Deboran, I want to ask a question. We're always learning new things, and you gave us more details about Diwali. You mentioned the proposal of moving the election date back a week, from October 20 to October 27, which did get and has gotten, rightfully so, a lot of negative feedback, not on the Diwali aspect so much as what is seen as moving the election back a week for pension guarantees for MPs who would miss it otherwise by a day.
I just want to ask this for you to be on the record. In order to not conflict with Diwali next year and the fixed election date, the only option is not just to move it back one week to October 27, as was proposed by the NDP and Liberals. In fact, the election date could be moved and advanced ahead to not conflict with Diwali and the celebrations that go on.
One week before would be Monday, October 13, which would be Thanksgiving. I think we would agree that would not be an ideal time. If I were to say Monday, October 6, would that be a date that would not conflict and be appropriate as well?
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It's a busy weekend for all of us.
Ms. Reusch, in a bit of a different angle, I want to ask you about youth being involved in our democratic process. You mentioned and highlighted in your opening statement about voting, which is obviously very key—getting younger people to cast a ballot.
One of the other things I think is interesting and hasn't been discussed or raised too much yet in our deliberations on Bill is young people working for Elections Canada and participating through employment, if they're students or looking for part-time work or extra hours.
One of the things I want to raise or flag and maybe get your initial opinion on is clause 31, which is proposed subsection 171(2) of the bill, which would be adding two extra advance poll days. I'll also ask Mr. Mulroy to respond as well, in his work as a lawyer for disability rights. This is regarding young people, those with disabilities and seniors.
Having four days of advance polls now requires somebody to work 48 hours over four days. The polls are open 12 hours per day. By going now to six, which is the way it's written and if Elections Canada doesn't change its employment rules, we're asking a young person, a person with disabilities or a senior to work 72 hours over six days, plus their travel time each day, plus set-up and take down, plus the training.
Do you see that if we don't get some change, or I think what's been done before, we're going to see young people not participate by being able to work the elections and participate in that aspect of our democracy?
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Thank you very much, Mr. Chair, and I'd like to thank the witnesses for being with us today.
I want to follow up on something that my colleague, MP Duncan, mentioned. He mentioned in his line of questioning an advance to the date of October 13. Obviously, we cannot as it is Thanksgiving, and Monday, October 6, is actually Sukkot, a Jewish high holiday. The week prior is September 29, the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, and there are municipal elections in Newfoundland and Labrador. The week prior to that is Rosh Hashanah, and September 1 is Labour Day. I've looked at the length of the campaign. It has to be between 36 days and 50 days. Mathematically, I looked at all of the Mondays in the fall. Unfortunately, there are many Mondays that have conflicts.
Further to that, my question is actually for Ms. Reusch. I had the great pleasure of being on the electoral reform committee back in 2016. Apathy is Boring presented to us at that time. It was on October 3, 2016, in Montreal, and Carolyn Loutfi presented to us. We heard from her that—and you mentioned something along these lines—if youth don't vote in their first two elections upon eligibility, it's very likely they will not continue to vote. At that time, it was suggested that, perhaps, we should look at piloting online voting. You didn't mention that in your remarks. You did mention the weekend voting, which I'll get to.
It's not something we did recommend at that time for many reasons. We now see a lot more with respect to foreign interference in elections, and the use of cyber-attacks. What are your thoughts on that? You didn't mention it. I just want to know—has there been a change in your position on that?
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My last question is on weekend voting. I'm looking at the chair, and I think I have some time.
I know that at the time of the study on electoral reform, there were a lot of concerns for people, especially young people, who work on weekends. They go to school during the week, so weekends are their only opportunity to work to be able to pay for their studies.
We also heard from gig workers, people who work in the retail industry and so on and so forth, as well as people who work Monday to Friday, nine to five, saying that the only days they have off are Saturday and Sunday. They have to do the groceries, the laundry, clean the house and so on, so they actually prefer to keep it on the Monday.
Is this still, in your experience, the feeling that you're hearing? Do you have any data to support why we should move to weekend voting?
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Thank you for that question.
As I said, in our experience and in the research that we've done, we found that almost 80% of young people felt that weekend voting would make it easier for them to participate. Everyone has different circumstances. There are many young people who work, as you say, Monday to Friday, nine to five, and having two days as opposed to one, I think, is beneficial.
I know there are some challenges with three-day voting, particularly around polling stations, leasing and various administrative elements that are a little bit outside of my scope, but I think it's important that we study and consider the different options, which would include weekend voting.
I'm going to refer to quite a bit of information. I'll take a look at the whole situation.
I voted for the first time in 1995, and now I'm with the Bloc Québécois. That says a lot. It's very important to have a good experience for your first and second vote. I couldn't agree more.
That said, there's also human behaviour. Let's face it, when time is limited to go and vote, compared to when you have time to go tomorrow or the day after, the situation is different. Sometimes, we find that when there's plenty of time to do it, it doesn't necessarily mean that more people will go.
Besides, here in Canada, voting measures are extremely voter-friendly when you look at what's happening in municipalities, such as in Quebec. We need to find legal and impartial accommodation measures so that the Chief Electoral Officer can do his job.
I was hearing about voice recognition earlier. I'll ask him if that's an option. I think we've devoted enough study hours to cyber-attacks and fake news, among other things. We're very skittish.
That said, I realize that we're going to run out of resources soon. Earlier, my colleague said that we need more time, but that young people need to work, and that those who don't work could work. In the end, there's no winning recipe.
I find it interesting that we're discussing this together. Beyond what may be hidden—I'm insinuating that we're changing the date because it changes things in some people's pockets, but I'm not going there—at the end of the day, we have a Chief Electoral Officer who is exceptional in this democratic context, and we must have confidence in him. As in Quebec and elsewhere, he can very well postpone the election date. Why is it always Monday? If Monday is Thanksgiving, it'll be Tuesday. There's no winning solution.
That said, I think we're opening the door very wide because, yes, there are federal, provincial and municipal elections. Of course, there will be some overlap, but are we doing this on purpose? I think the Chief Electoral Officer has all the expertise to make this choice. What do you think?
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Thank you for your question.
The reliance on telephone voting comes from a 1998 report from Elections Canada that KPMG authored, saying that was the most secure and accessible means of voting. That's the reliance.
A colleague brought up the efficacy of voting online, and there are obvious concerns with security when we look to wholescale online voting. Telephone voting for disabled Canadians is not quite the same wholescale change to the current format.
In terms of the current means for voting for Mr. Steacy, for example, through the special voting procedures, he is able to use a Braille template or have a third party cast his vote for him. Mr. Steacy has relied on a glucose meter and has lost sensation in the tips of his fingers. Unfortunately, he's not able to use Braille. Obviously, there are accessibility issues in relying on Braille. If he were able to use Braille, he could not independently confirm that his vote was cast or not spoiled, for example. Relying on a third party, he wholly loses the ability to confirm the accuracy of his ballot.
While there are certainly things to explore in telephone voting—
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Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I put forward this motion given what we learned at this committee, namely that the NDP met with the , officials in the minister's office, the PCO, the PMO and the Chief Electoral Officer on at least two occasions regarding the drafting of Bill , which has been held up by the Liberals as an elections bill. It turns out that it is really a pensions bill disguised as an elections bill, because buried within this so-called elections bill is a clause that would secure the pensions of soon-to-be-defeated Liberal MPs and, I might add, soon-to-be-defeated NDP MPs.
The situation the faces is that he is the most unpopular Prime Minister in more than 30 years. Canadians are tired of this corrupt Liberal government, and he knows it. Liberal MPs know it. The problem they have is that the Prime Minister must call an election by October 20, 2025. That means the soon-to-be-defeated Liberal MPs elected in 2019 won't qualify for their pensions.
What does the do? He sneaks eight laws into this bill that push the date of the next election back by a week, under the guise of a conflict with Diwali. Guess what. By moving the election back by one week, suddenly the soon-to-be-defeated Liberal MPs will qualify for their pensions. It is why this bill came to be known as the “loser Liberal pension protection act”. It is, I must say, about as cynical and dishonest as it gets from this cynical, dishonest and corrupt Liberal government. While this bill has become known as the “loser Liberal pension protection act”, it seems it might be better known as the “loser NDP-Liberal pension protection act”, given the role that we learned the NDP played in drafting this legislation.
When the minister was here, he had an opportunity to clarify exactly how many times he met behind closed doors with NDP party officials, Daniel Blaikie and other NDP members of Parliament to devise this scheme to pad the pockets of soon-to-be-defeated Liberal and NDP MPs. The minister refused to answer.
Very simply, Mr. Chair, when the , NDP MPs and officials in the PMO, the PCO and so on meet behind closed doors to cynically and dishonestly concoct this scheme to pad their pensions, Canadians deserve transparency. There must be transparency. That is what this motion provides for. It requires the minister and the Prime Minister's Office to disclose how many meetings were held to produce any communications surrounding the discussions that led to this pensions bill disguised as an elections bill, and to hear from the co-author of this bill, former NDP MP Daniel Blaikie. It's a common-sense motion.
As the often liked to say, sunshine is the best disinfectant. Well, this will provide a lot of sunshine on what is a very dark and cynical attempt to pad the pockets of Liberal and NDP MPs.