Elections Canada probing thousands of 2019 election ballots with unclear evidence of citizenship - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 05:05 PM | Calgary | -11.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

Elections Canada probing thousands of 2019 election ballots with unclear evidence of citizenship

Elections Canada says it has identified roughly 3,500 cases of people who voted in 2019's federal election where there was conflicting evidence about their citizenship, CBC News has learned.

No evidence found of an organized effort to disrupt the electoral process, said agency

For the first time, Elections Canada has access to data that can allow it to determine how many non-Canadian voters may have fraudulently cast ballots in the 2019 federal election. (Tijana Martin/The Canadian Press)

Elections Canada says it hasidentifiedroughly 3,500 cases of people who voted in 2019's federal election where there wasconflicting evidence about theircitizenship, CBC News has learned.

But almost a year after Canadians headed to the polls,the agency says it'sstill trying to determinehow many of those cases if any involvednon-Canadian citizens casting ballots.

A fear of foreign nationals or permanent residentstaking advantage of Canada's honour system and voting illegallywas one of the most common themes Elections Canada documented while monitoringsocial media in the lead-up to the Oct. 21 election, according toCBC's analysis of the agency's internal documents. Some people called on the agency to require voters to show proof of citizenship at the polls, such as a passport.

But many studies in the U.S. have shown that stricter voter requirements supposedly introducedto prevent fraud haveserved asaform of voter suppression,deterring thousands of voters and disenfranchising racial minorities.

Elections Canada is still conducting its own analysis, but its initial assessment showsthe 2019 ballots with conflicting citizenship information under review accounted for just 0.02 per centof all votes cast and were so widely distributed they couldnot have affected the outcome in any particular riding.

"Nooutcome in any riding would have been affected by possible instances of non-citizen voting," said Elections Canada in a media statement.

"We have no evidence that suggests any organized or large-scale effort to disrupt the electoral process."

Number of cases could turn out to be much lower

CBC News asked for a breakdown of the voting districts where Elections Canada found conflicting citizenship information. The agency said it would be "premature" to share that data since "an analysis is still underway."

University of Ottawa law professor Michael Pal studies election laws in Canada. He saidhe'd be surprised if itturns out that thousands of non-citizens voted last year.

Pal said he expects the number of suspicious ballotsto drop dramatically during Elections Canada'sverification process.

"Whenever there are reports like this, it tends often to be paperwork errors or mistakes that can be tracked down," he said.

"There was a lot of sound and fury about this and non-citizens allegedly voting in the U.S. And all the academic research and the research by think tanks shows that concern was overblown and happens very rarely, if at all."

'The cure is worse than the disease,' says Election law expert Michael Pal

4 years ago
Duration 1:10
Non-citizens voting is not happening at a large enough scale to put in place stricter voting ID rules and could do more harm than good, said the University of Ottawa professor

Every case has its own paper trail

Bill C-76 also gave Elections Canada the power for the first time to cross-reference its voters list withdata from Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada. Before the 2019 federal election, the agency identified 85,000 names on thefederal voter register whom it determined were not Canadian citizens. The agency, through its work, later removed 74,000 of those names from the list.

The legislationalso allowsthe agency to search for cases of permanent residents or foreign nationals who may have fraudulently cast ballots in the 2019 federal election. Elections Canada said it's still following the paper trail byopening sealed ballot bags containing all documents relatedto eachfile.

That "rigorous" and labour-intensive process has been slowed down by COVID-19 restrictions and the agency's focus on preparing for the possibility of an early election in the midst of a pandemic, the agency said.

"Every potential case is unique and has its own paper trail," said Elections Canada. "Each case must therefore be verified separately "

Canadians could go to the polls again before the agencypasses on any suspectcases to the Commissioner of Canada Elections,Yves Ct, forinvestigation.

On Oct. 8,Ct's office announced it laid two charges against a non-Canadianaccused of fraudulentlyvoting five years ago. The office said the man was charged with registering to vote in the riding of Don Valley East in Ontario knowing he wasn't eligible, and withcasting a ballot in 2015 knowing he wasn't qualified.

Requiring Canadians to show proof of citizenship at the polls could do more harm than good and deter voters from voting, say election experts. (Justin Tang/Canadian Press)

Permanent resident calls for stricterID requirements

Permanent resident Paul Gabriel said it's "incredible and scary" that Elections Canada has takenso long to detect such cases. He argues the agency should make changes before the next election to fix what he calls a "loophole."

It's illegal under the Canada Elections Act for a non-Canadian citizen to vote whileknowing they are ineligible. However, voters are not required to show proof of citizenship at the polls. Gabriel said that should change, but thatwould require Parliament changingthe Elections Act.

He's afruit importer living in Beiseker, Albertawho was born in the United Kingdom and has lived in Canada for 19 years. He said he erroneously received a voter information card in the mail for the first time in 2019 and posted a photo online with a warning that was shared by thousands of people.

Paul Gabriel says Canada should require proof of citizenship at the polls and enforce the law. (Colin Hall/CBC News)

"I can vote with this card and an Alberta driver's licence, but I am NOT a Canadian citizen," Gabriel wrote on Facebook on Oct. 7, 2019. "I am not going to vote because I am not legally entitled to, but others will.

"Your election is about to be stolen from you by illegal voters and we all know who gave them this ability and who they will vote for."

Elections Canada said those who receive the cards may have mistakenly provided the wrong information to another federal or provincial electoral management bodies.

"It was an honest and genuine mistake," said Gabriel who said he thinks permanent residents should be able to vote since they pay taxes. "But it just shows how flawed the voting system is."

Elections Canada said it'susually only countries thatissuenational ID cards that require proof of it at the polls Canada,the U.K., Australiaand New Zealand don't.It costs $120 for a five-year Canadian passport,which is beyond the means of someCanadians. Birth certificates also come with a price tag and do not feature a photo.

Balancing risks

Chief Electoral Officer Stphane Perraultis working on a set of recommendations coming out of the last federal election to present toParliament in the spring of 2021.

"Any recommendation in this area would need to ensure the integrity of the election by carefully balancing the risks of non-citizen voting with the risk of excluding a potentially large number of Canadians who do not have documentary evidence of their citizenship readily available," the agency said in a statement.

Holly Ann Garnett is an assistant professor ofpolitical scienceat the Royal Military College of Canada who researches electionintegrity. She said that changing voting requirements in Canada would do more harm than good.

"I think the issue of legitimate voters being deterred from voting is more crucial than the small chance that a non-citizen would be voting," she said.

Garnett said evidence consistently shows that when countries increase the cost or the difficulties of voting through things like stricter voter ID rules or advanced registrationvoter turnout drops in somedemographics.

"So the real issue here is the challenge of making sure that voting is accessible, especially to those population groups who are already not likely to vote," she said.

Wisconsin is a case in point. Strict ID laws may have driven 17,000 or more registered voters away from the polls in the last federal election, according to a university study in the state.

Convictions are rare

The Commissioner of Canada Elections "considers illegal voting to be among the most serious violations that cause harm to the integrity of the electoral process," the office said. The penalty for voter fraud can beup to fiveyears inprison,or a fine of up to$50,000.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau votes with son Hadrien in Montreal, Monday, Oct. 21, 2019. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

Thecommissioner's office said it can opt forother penalties and responses to cases of voter fraud caution letters, compliance agreements oradministrative fines, to name a few.

In 2006, a non-Canadian citizen who voted herereceived an absolute discharge after doing 30 hours of community service; the court found the offender did not intend to affect the vote.

In 1999, two otherspleaded guilty after voting in the 1997 general election knowing they didn't qualify because they weren't Canadians. They had to pay $300 to a charity and received an absolute discharge.

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story said Elections Canada said in the spring of 2019 it was eliminating 103,000 people from the federal voter register that it identified were not Canadian citizens. In fact, the agency removed 74,000 names from the voter register. Elections Canada says the earlier figure was outdated and based on data a government department shared with Elections Canada that turned out to be incorrect.
    Oct 13, 2020 11:00 AM ET