Thank you.
I wanted to start with a note of frustration at some of the requests that have come down. Why aren't there government studies on this subject? A lot of the material here relates to how this has performed in foreign countries, and you obviously can't have a Canadian government study of that.
I used to be the critic for democratic issues for the Canadian Alliance, and I was asked repeatedly why voter turnout was lower in Canada than elsewhere. The simplest explanation was that in European countries, which we're usually compared to, they vote on weekends, when people have free time. Having gone through three elections now, I must say that I see over and over again lots of anecdotal examples of places where that's an issue.
The comment I wanted to make is with regard to advance polls. The rural versus urban issue is based on a bit of experience I've had myself, having represented at one point a riding that was half urban and half rural, the city of Kanata and the large rural area. Subsequently, it was been redistributed, so it's all rural now.
One of the things I've been aware of is the degree of difference between the number of people using advance polls in my constituency and in the adjoining constituencies, which fall within the boundaries of Ottawa and are urban. What you notice is a very significant difference because of the fact—this is what I've attributed it to—that advance polls, which are not as widely distributed as regular polls, are easier to get to in an urban setting than they are in a rural setting. I think that goes a long way toward explaining why you see higher turnouts at advance polls, in particular in the two ridings to my immediate east. So I think having advance polls at all locations on the day before voting is likely to have a particularly significant impact in rural areas, and as a rural MP I appreciate that.
Just another thought, though, pursuing Mr. Bélanger's observation about voting at the RO's office ahead of time. There's already a provision in the law that permits more than one RO's office to be set up. We took advantage of that in my constituency. We've got a constituency where, essentially, in population, it's like a dumbbell: very few people live in the middle and there are two population centres at each end, about two hours—