Thank you for the opportunity to speak to this committee today.
I am a Class of 1965 Professor in Leadership at the Royal Military College of Canada, and hold cross-appointments at Queen's University and the University of East Anglia in the U.K. I am also the co-director of the Electoral Integrity Project, an international network of scholars and practitioners seeking to improve the quality of elections with academic evidence. I will refer, in this statement, to the work of myself and co-director Toby James.
Elections are designed to achieve the goals of democracy, to empower citizens through equality of contestation, deliberation, participation and adjudication. Choices of electoral procedures and laws must be aimed toward these principles. I will briefly outline how three of these principles are affected by the actions and arguments of the longest ballot committee, which is the subject of our meeting today.
First, contestation requires that elections allow a wider range of groups, individuals and parties to put their names forward for election. A large number of candidates on the ballot can counterintuitively threaten this principle, as it makes it more difficult for legitimate smaller parties and candidates to be noticed or heard in public forums. In response to this challenge, any measures to discourage the protest activities of the longest ballot committee must not have the by-effect of discouraging legitimate candidates who wish to put their names forward in hope of getting elected, nor should it discriminate against certain candidates based on their platforms or group affiliation.
I believe the suggestions of the Chief Electoral Officer to address the consequences of this protest are reasonable means to ensure the seriousness of candidates, while also permitting open contestation. I support a move to allow citizens to sign only one nomination form. Given the size of our electoral districts, this should not unduly discourage legitimate candidates from running. Second, each candidate should have a unique official agent to work with them in the campaign. I do not believe this would be a barrier to serious candidates.
Next, I will highlight that elections should foster wide and even participation. Long ballots may be an annoyance for the average citizen, but for those with accessibility needs, long ballots reduce their ability to independently take part in the election. I would refer you to the consultations that Elections Canada conducted with advocacy groups, noting that long ballots could affect electors with low vision, blindness, dyslexia, challenges with dexterity or mobility, our second-language English or French speakers, or our wheelchair users.
The Chief Electoral Officer's decision to use write-in ballots in the Battle River—Crowfoot by-election was the best option in a difficult situation. However, I would caution that write-in ballots also present barriers to many of the same voters and are not a long-term viable solution, given the example of inevitable situations of similar-sounding last names. Perhaps, in this regard, the proposal from Bill C-65 from last fall to allow for party names to be written in rather than a candidate's name on a write-in ballot could help to alleviate these concerns.
Finally, long ballots and the workaround write-in ballots are more difficult to count, making the vote-counting process more susceptible to technical error. Given that we have safeguards in place in Canada to ensure that the vote count is accurate, I would be surprised if these ballots directly caused any inaccuracies in results, but I must stress the burden that it places on a temporary workforce that, in many cases, has been working since early in the morning. It could even discourage voters from signing up to be poll workers and further exacerbate very real concerns about the future workforce of elections.
Finally, I wanted to address the principle of electoral adjudication. This involves ensuring not only that the rules of the election are followed but that new laws are determined fairly. The issue of effective electoral reform mechanisms is, as I understand it, the main goal of the longest ballot committee. I will thus end with a few comments on best practices for the creation of electoral laws as set out by the global network for securing electoral integrity and a forthcoming volume by my colleague, Toby James.
These principles first recognize that electoral reform is not simply a technical but a political activity. It is true that the policy-makers involved in reforming elections will have a vested interest in the rules that will get them elected in the future. However, there are measures that can mitigate these threats, which include building solutions to problems based on empirical evidence, meaningfully involving a variety of stakeholders while acknowledging that all actors have political incentives in the process, and ensuring transparency throughout the process. Citizens' assemblies can be part of this process, but like any other mechanism of governance, the rules and procedures that guide their discussions will have political implications, and thus require transparency and oversight as well.
To recap, long ballots pose an accessibility issue for those seeking elected office and for voters. The proposals set forth by the Chief Electoral Officer are reasonable measures to address the challenges posed by this movement. Reforming electoral laws does pose challenges related to conflict of interest for all stakeholders, but there are principles that can be followed to mitigate these threats.
Thank you, and I look forward to your questions.