Any substantive changes in this Legislative Summary that have been made since the preceding issue are indicated in bold print.
Bill C-33, An Act to amend the Canada Elections Act and to make consequential amendments to other Acts was introduced in the House of Commons on 24 November 2016. 1 The bill addresses five areas under the Canada Elections Act 2 (CEA):
Bill C-33 effectively reverses some of the legislative changes enacted in 2014 by the Fair Elections Act, 3 which amended the CEA in the following ways:
Bill C-33 also removes a long-standing ban on voting by persons who have been continuously absent from Canada for five years or more, and enables Canadian citizens between the ages of 14 and 18 to register as “future electors” to facilitate their addition to the National Register of Electors upon attaining the voting age of 18.
The proposal to create a Register of Future Electors (RFE) is derived from a recommendation of the CEO in his report to Parliament following the 42nd federal election.5 In that report, the CEO observed that registering electors once they turn 18 and thus can vote federally is a “continual challenge,” that “the gap between the estimated number of electors and the number of electors who were registered is highest for 18 -year-olds,” and that 18 - to 34 -year-olds are disproportionately underrepresented on voter lists. 6
The CEO recommended that he be given the authority to retain information on citizens between the ages of 16 and 18 so that they might be registered as soon as they were old enough to vote. 7
As noted by the CEO, pre-registration of future electors exists in several other jurisdictions around the world.8 Within Canada, Nova Scotia,9 Prince Edward Island,10 Yukon,11 and, as of 1 July 2017, Ontario 12 all allow for the collection of information on individuals aged 16 and up for this reason. In the United States, where federal elections are administered by state electoral agencies, 27 states (and the District of Columbia) allow for pre-registration at some point before an individual turns 18, ranging from age 16 up to 6 months before the 18th birthday.13 Pre-registration of some kind exists in various other jurisdictions, including in:
Bill C-33 amends the CEA to create the RFE and allows the CEO to collect the information of young people, aged 14 and up, so that when they turn 18 they are automatically placed on the National Register of Electors.
In 2014, the Fair Elections Act imposed certain limitations on the ability of the CEO to educate and inform the public about the electoral process and democratic rights more generally. As a result of the Fair Elections Act, such efforts could be aimed only at primary and secondary school students, and not the general public. Prior to the Fair Elections Act, the CEO had the power to implement public education and information programs, and engage in outreach programs for particular groups of voters, without restriction and with particular emphasis on persons or groups most likely to experience difficulties exercising their democratic rights.20
Bill C-33 restores the broad-based authority of the CEO to educate and inform the public about the electoral process and democratic rights, and to use various media to inform the public about the electoral process. These amendments follow the recommendations made by the CEO in his report following the 42nd general election, in which he noted that “[w]hile civic education for youth is obviously important, it is not less important for electors who lack the basic knowledge about democracy.” 21 The CEO recommended that:
The CEO should again be given the mandate to implement public education and information programs to make the electoral process better known to the general public, particularly to those persons and groups most likely to experience difficulties in exercising their democratic rights. This mandate should specifically include outreach activities to groups of electors that have a lower registration rate than the general population.22
Since 2007, in order to be allowed to vote, every elector has been required to confirm his or her identity and residence with the deputy returning officer and poll clerk.
Currently, electors can establish their identity and residence by providing election officers with:
Individuals who do not possess acceptable identification at the time of voting must undergo a procedure prescribed in legislation and administered by election officers in order to vote.
Voting by non-resident citizens of Canada first occurred when the vote was extended to soldiers fighting abroad in the First World War.23 For most of the 20 th century, only certain types of non-resident citizens, such as armed forces personnel and public service staff posted abroad, were permitted to vote in federal elections. The CEA was amended in 1993 to enable all Canadian citizens who reside outside Canada to vote in federal elections, provided that they have been absent from Canada for less than five years and plan to return to Canada (certain electors, such as those serving abroad in the Canadian Forces or those working at embassies abroad, are exempt from the five-year absence rule).
In his September 2005 report following the 38th general election, the CEO recommended that the limitation contained in section 11(d) of the CEA, prohibiting voting by persons who have been absent from Canada for five consecutive years or more and who intend to return to Canada, be removed.24
The following year, in 2006, the House of Commons Standing Committee on Procedure and House Affairs conducted a study assessing the CEA and possible amendments, using the CEO’s September 2005 report as a starting point.25 The committee agreed with the CEO’s recommendation that the five-year period should be eliminated, and it went further by suggesting that all Canadian citizens absent from Canada should be able to vote, and that the requirement that there be an intention to return to Canada be dropped.
In his statutory report following the 41st general election, which took place in May 2011, the CEO explained changes following the 2006 general election to the manner of calculating the residency requirement for Canadians living abroad, indicating that a visit to Canada was no longer being considered a resumption of residence in Canada and so would not interrupt the five-year period.26 Subsequently, the constitutionality of the five-year limit for Canadians living abroad was challenged in court by two Canadians living in the United States, Gillian Frank and Jamie Duong.
In a judgment rendered on 2 May 2014 in Frank et al. v. Attorney General of Canada, Justice Michael Penny of the Ontario Superior Court held that the provisions of the CEA preventing Canadian citizens absent from Canada for more than five years from voting violated those citizens’ democratic right to vote guaranteed by section 3 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.27 Section 3 of the Charter states: “Every citizen of Canada has the right to vote in an election of members of the House of Commons or of a legislative assembly and to be qualified for membership therein.”28
Justice Penny further held that the violation was not saved by section 1 of the Charter,29 in that the limits prescribed by the CEA on Canadian citizens absent from Canada for more than five years were not “demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.”30
As a result, Justice Penny declared that sections 11(d), 222(1)(b), 222(1)(c), 223(1)(f), 226(f) and the word “temporarily” found in sections 220, 222(1) and 223(1)(e) of the CEA had no force or effect.31 The decision took effect immediately.
In response to the ruling, the CEO indicated that Elections Canada would no longer apply the invalidated provisions, and that following the court decision:
Canadian citizens aged 18 or older who reside abroad may apply to be added to the International Register of Electors and to vote by mail-in special ballot in federal general elections, by-elections and referendums, provided they have at some point resided in Canada.32
The Attorney General of Canada appealed the decision. On 20 July 2015 the Ontario Court of Appeal, in a split 2–1 ruling, allowed the appeal and overturned the trial decision.33 It held that while the five-year limit for Canadians living abroad violated their rights under section 3 of the Charter, the limitation was justified under section 1. Writing for the majority, Ontario Chief Justice George Strathy noted that:
Canada’s political system is based on geographically defined electoral districts … Permitting all non-resident citizens to vote would allow them to participate in making laws that affect Canadian residents on a daily basis, but have little to no practical consequence for their own daily lives. This would erode the social contract and undermine the legitimacy of the laws.34
The notion of a “social contract” had not previously been expressly invoked by the Attorney General before the application judge.
In his dissenting opinion, Justice John Laskin argued that the trial decision was right, and that the five-year residency limitation was not justified under section 1 of the Charter. Justice Laskin posited that the harmful effects of the limitation on a citizen’s right to vote outweighed any potential benefits:
The benefits of the five-year non-residency limitation are thin, especially because already several groups of Canadian citizens who may live outside Canada for many years are entitled to vote. These groups of citizens have no more obligation to obey our laws than do Gillian Frank and Jamie Duong, yet unlike Frank and Duong, they can participate in the election of our lawmakers. To the extent the social contract is eroded when individuals not subject to the majority of Canada’s laws participate in electing our lawmakers, surely it has already been eroded by the rules extending the vote to those individuals.
By contrast, the harmful effects of depriving the respondents of their right to vote are significant. Voting, participating in the selection of a country’s representatives, is a cornerstone of a free and democratic state. Depriving a person of this most fundamental benefit of citizenship, constitutionally guaranteed in Canada, must inevitably have a serious adverse impact. This deprivation turns the respondents into second class citizens and so undermines the values of equality and inclusiveness stressed in Sauvé and underlying our Charter rights.
Moreover, laws made today affect how our country will be governed, not just in the immediate future, but for years to come. Yet Canadian citizens abroad for more than five years, such as the respondents, will have no voice in the future direction of their country even though they have family here, intend to return here, and thus will be affected by laws enacted while they are abroad.
In this final balancing, these harmful effects on the respondents far outweigh any benefits achieved by the challenged legislation.35
The original applicants, Gillian Frank and Jamie Duong, were granted leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada in April 2016.
Bill C-33 would remove all of the disputed provisions limiting the right of Canadians living abroad for more than five years to vote. The case was to be heard on 16 February 2017. However, the Attorney General of Canada, the respondent in the appeal, sought and obtained an adjournment to the hearing of the appeal, arguing that Bill C-33 makes the appeal moot.36 The hearing has been adjourned to the 2018 winter session of the Supreme Court.37
The Commissioner of Canada Elections is the independent officer who ensures compliance with and enforcement of the Canada Elections Act and the Referendum Act.38 Under section 511 of the CEA, if the Commissioner believes that an offence has been committed, the Commissioner can refer the matter to the Director of Public Prosecutions, who is responsible for deciding whether to initiate a prosecution, and, if so, to conduct the prosecution.
From 1974 to 2014, the CEO appointed the Commissioner of Canada Elections. The Commissioner reported to the CEO within Elections Canada. The Fair Elections Act changed this structure, and since this legislation has come into force, the Commissioner is to be appointed by the Director of Public Prosecutions for a non renewable term of seven years, removable before that time by the Director of Public Prosecutions for cause. The Fair Elections Act also specified that the Director of Public Prosecutions cannot consult the CEO when appointing the Commissioner. As detailed in part 2.5 of this Legislative Summary, Bill C-33 returns the Commissioner of Canada Elections to within the Office of the Chief Electoral Officer.
Clause 1 amends section 2(1) of the CEA, the definition section, to include two new definitions:
Currently, Part 4 of the CEA is entitled “Register of Electors.” Clause 6 of Bill C 33 changes the heading to “Register of Electors and Register of Future Electors.”
Clause 7 changes the first subheading in Part 4 to “Maintenance and Communication,” instead of “Maintenance and Communication of Register.”
Clause 8 adds new section 44 to the CEA. Like the existing section 44, the new section provides that the CEO is responsible for the maintenance of the Register of Electors, which contains identifying information on electors along with a unique, randomly generated identifier to help track changes to electors’ records; it also provides that inclusion in the register is optional. In addition, clause 8 establishes that the CEO maintains the RFE, which contains the same information as the Register of Electors, and that inclusion in the RFE is optional, as well.
Clause 8 also makes two additions to section 44:
Section 46 of the CEA currently outlines the sources of information the CEO can use to update the Register of Electors, and it specifies that some information that is not kept in the register itself can be retained for the purposes of correlating new information with previously collected information in the register.
Clause 10 clarifies that those same sources may be used to populate and update the Register of Future Electors and that the same information may be retained for correlation purposes.
Clause 10 also adds section 46(1.01) to the CEA, which mandates that when future electors included in the RFE become electors, their RFE information is added to the Register of Electors.
Clause 11 adds section 46.01 to the CEA, allowing the Minister of Citizenship and Immigration to provide the CEO with specified information about permanent residents and foreign nationals contained in the databases of the Minister’s department, in response to a written request by the CEO. The purpose, as stated in this section, is to assist the CEO in updating the Register of Electors, including by deleting the names of people who are not electors.39
In his report following the 42nd General Election, the CEO recommended the adoption of such a provision, noting that:
Another important recommendation to improve the accuracy of the information in the NROE [National Register of Electors] is to grant authority to Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) to share citizenship data with Elections Canada.
Although there is no single repository of citizenship information in Canada, IRCC has information on non-citizens residing in the country that would help Elections Canada ensure that only citizens are included in the NROE. Internal studies have indicated that approximately 0.2 percent of individuals in the NROE are potentially not Canadian citizens. Having access to non-citizen data would allow Elections Canada to identify and remove these individuals from the NROE on an ongoing basis. Elections Canada could also compare it with data from other sources to confirm the accuracy of the entries in the NROE. [Recommendation A7]40
The bill retains the provisions in sections 46.1 and 46.2 for the CEO to gather some information about electors from the Minister of National Revenue (MNR). Section 46.1 permits the MNR, for the purposes of assisting the CEO in updating the Register of Electors, to request that any individuals making a return of income under the Income Tax Act 41 indicate whether they are Canadian citizens. Section 46.2 requires that the MNR provide the CEO with the name, date of birth and address of any individual who is deceased, whose legal representatives filed a return of income, and whose legal representatives have authorized the sharing of that information.
Clause 11 updates sections 46.1 and 46.2 so that they apply to the RFE, as well as to the Register of Electors.
Clause 12 amends the following sections so that they apply to future electors and the RFE:
Clause 12 also amends section 48 so that any updates to the Register of Electors based on information drawn from the Register of Future Electors (new section 46(1.01)) are not subject to the notice and consent requirements that normally apply.
Under current section 52(1) of the CEA, the CEO is required to delete from the Register of Electors any information pertaining to an individual who is dead, who is not an elector, who makes a request for deletion, or whose authorized representative under a court-ordered regime (i.e., a guardianship, tutorship, or curatorship) makes a request for deletion. The CEO also retains the discretion to delete the information of an individual who fails to provide verification within 60 days of a request under section 51 of the CEA (see section 2.1.4 of this Legislative Summary).
Clause 13 extends these requirements to apply to future electors and the RFE as well. It clarifies, however, that any deletion from the RFE of information pertaining to an individual who is no longer a future elector is subject to section 44(4), which, as noted in section 2.1.4 of this Legislative Summary, allows this information to be retained if it can be transferred to the Register of Electors.
This clause also clarifies that section 52(1)(d), which permits an authorized representative acting under a court-ordered protective regime to request that an elector’s information be deleted from the Register of Electors or the RFE, shall only apply if the person is mentally incapacitated, and it adds section 52(1)(e), which permits the parents of a future elector with a mental incapacity to request deletion from the RFE.
Under current section 53 of the CEA, an elector may write to the CEO to request that his or her information in the Register of Electors be used only for federal electoral or referendum purposes. Clause 14 adds section 53(2), under which a future elector may write to the CEO to request that his or her information in the RFE be used only to update the Register of Electors and to transmit information under section 18 (which, as described in sections 2.2.1 to 2.2.3 of this Legislative Summary), allows the CEO to inform the public about the electoral process).
Section 54 of the CEA allows electors to access, upon written request, all the information relating to them in the CEO’s possession. Clause 15 extends this access to future electors as well.
Section 55(1) of the CEA permits the CEO to enter into information-sharing agreements with provincial bodies that establish lists of electors. Clause 16 allows the CEO to make similar agreements with provinces involving information about future electors and registers of future electors.42
Current section 56 of the CEA prohibits, among other things:
Clause 17 amends these prohibitions to make them apply to future electors and the RFE as well.
Clause 17 also adds section 56(e.1), which prohibits the use of personal information from the RFE for anything but the following:
Current section 485 of the CEA categorizes the offences set out in section 56 of the CEA concerning the Register of Electors as either summary offences or dual procedure offences (able to be prosecuted as either a summary conviction offence or an indictable offence). The prohibitions in sections 56(a) to 56(d) are categorized as dual procedure offences, while that in section 56(e) is a summary conviction offence. This latter offence concerns the unauthorized use of personal information recorded in the Register of Electors.
Clause 31 of Bill C-33 specifies that the new offence in section 56(e.1), like the offence found in section 56(e), is to be prosecuted as a summary conviction offence. The other prohibitions concerning the new RFE are dual procedure offences.
Clause 4 repeals section 17.1 of the CEA, which currently limits the CEO’s power to implement public education and information programs about the electoral process to students at the primary and secondary levels.
Clause 5 restores the CEO’s public education mandate as it existed prior to the Fair Elections Act, reinstating pre-Fair Elections Act wording in new section 18(1) regarding the use of advertising to inform electors, both inside and outside Canada, about the exercise of their democratic rights. The Fair Elections Act restricted the use of such advertising to the transmission of messages about how to vote, how to become a candidate, how to be included on a voters’ list, the identification requirements for voting, and measures for assisting voters with disabilities.43
Clause 5 replaces section 18(1) with new sections 18(1), 18(1.1) and 18(1.2). Under new section 18(1), the specific restrictions on the topics the CEO is permitted to address is removed, and the CEO is permitted to “implement public education and information programs to make the electoral process better known to the public.”
New section 18(1.1) permits the CEO to use any media that he or she deems appropriate to provide the public, both inside and outside Canada, with information relating to Canada’s electoral process and the right to vote and to be a candidate. New section 18(1.2) further allows the CEO to establish programs to disseminate information targeted at voters outside Canada.
Clause 5 also replaces current section 18(2) with a new section that specifies that the CEO must ensure that information about the following must be fully accessible to electors with disabilities:
New section 18(2.1) adds a further safeguard for electors with disabilities: it requires the CEO to ensure that any information or advertisement on how future electors may have their names added to the Register of Future Electors and may have corrections made to information respecting them in that register must be fully accessible to future electors with disabilities.
Under current section 143(3) of the CEA, if an elector is able to establish his or her identity – but not residence – using two authorized pieces of identification, the elector can establish his or her residence by a two-stage attestation process:
Section 143(3) is amended by clause 19(3) of Bill C-33 to permit an elector without acceptable identification to prove both identity and residence by a similar two-stage process:
Under section 143(2.1) of the CEA, it is the CEO who authorizes the types of identification that electors can use to prove their identity and residence. Currently, the CEA specifically prohibits the CEO from authorizing as identification a notice of confirmation of registration, also known as the voter information card. Clause 19(2) amends section 143(2.1) to remove the prohibition against authorizing the voter information card as a type of identification.
Currently, under section 143.1(1) of the CEA, the person who administers the written oath regarding an attestation must orally advise the oath-taker of the qualifications for electors and the penalty that may be imposed for being found guilty of voting fraudulently or attempting to vote fraudulently. Clause 20 replaces the requirement that oral advice be given with the requirement that the written oath signed by the elector include a statement of the qualifications for electors and the penalty for fraudulent voting.
Clause 20 also amends section 143.1(2) of the CEA, which currently requires that oral advice be given to the attester regarding the penalty for attesting for more than one elector and for taking a false oath. It replaces this provision with a requirement that the voucher’s written oath contain, among other things, a statement that indicates he or she knows the penalty that may be imposed for vouching for more than one elector and for taking a false oath.
Clause 19(4) amends sections 143(5) and 143(6) of the CEA to replace references to attesting to an elector’s residence with references to vouching. Amended section 143(5) maintains that no elector can vouch for more than one elector at an election, and amended section 143(6) states that an elector who has been vouched for cannot vouch for another elector.
Currently, under section 161(1)(b) of the CEA, an elector whose name is not on the revised list of electors (which is prepared for each division before polling day) may register in person on election day, provided that he or she:
Clause 21(2) amends section 161(1)(b) to provide that the elector may register in person on election day, provided that he or she:
Clause 22 amends section 161.1(2) of the CEA to make identical amendments to the oaths taken under the process for an elector registering on election day as clause 20 makes to oaths taken under the process through which a registered elector can prove his or her identity and residence at an election (described in section 2.3.1.2 of this Legislative Summary).
Clause 21(3) amends sections 161(6) and 161(7) of the CEA to replace references to attesting to an elector’s residence with references to vouching. Amended section 161(6) maintains that no elector can vouch for more than one elector at an election, and amended section 161(7) states that an elector who has been vouched for cannot vouch for another elector.
Currently, under section 169(2)(b) of the CEA, an elector whose name is not on the revised list of electors may register in person before the deputy returning officer at an advanced poll, provided that he or she:
Clause 23(2) amends section 169(2)(b) to provide that the elector may register in person before the deputy returning officer at an advanced poll, provided that he or she:
Clause 24 amends section 169.1(1) of the CEA to make identical amendments to the oaths taken under the process for an elector registering in person at an advance polling station as clause 20 makes to oaths taken under the process through which an elector can prove his or her identity and residence (described in section 2.3.1.2 of this Legislative Summary).
Clause 23(3) amends sections 169(5) and 169(6) of the CEA to replace references to attesting to an elector’s residence with references to vouching. Amended section 169(5) maintains that no elector can vouch for more than one elector at an election, and amended section 169(6) states that an elector who has been vouched for cannot vouch for another elector.
Division 4 of Part 11 of the CEA enables voters resident in Canada to vote by special ballot. The special ballot is available to electors who cannot or do not wish to cast a ballot at an ordinary or advance poll. Current sections 237.1(3.1) and 237.1(3.2) provide that multiple attestation and serial attestation are not permitted when an elector seeks to obtain a special ballot by visiting the office of a returning officer. Clause 30 amends these provisions by removing the references to attestation to residence and replacing them with references to vouching.
Current section 489(2) of the CEA categorizes as summary conviction offences both the offence of attesting to residence for more than one elector (found in sections 143(5), 161(6) and 169(5)) and the offence of attesting to residence when one’s own residence has been attested to (sections 143(6), 161(7) and 169(6)). Section 491 of the CEA categorizes these offences as summary conviction offences for the purposes of Part 11 of the Act, which deals with provisions for special voting.
Clause 32 of Bill C-33 replaces these offences with ones that prohibit improper vouching rather than attesting, while retaining prosecution by summary conviction for the new offences.
Section 491 also addresses the offences of attesting to residence for more than one elector and of attesting to residence when one’s own residence has been attested to, but as described in sections 237.1(3.1) and 237.1(3.2) of the CEA, which refer to Part 11, “Special Voting Rules.” Clause 33 amends section 491 to replace references to attestation to residence with references to vouching, and it retains prosecution by summary conviction for the new offences.
Current Part 11 of the CEA, “Special Voting Rules,” sets out voting rules that apply to the following groups of voters:
Electors who vote under the special voting rules do so by a special ballot with a separate process of voting provided for each group of voters.
Bill C-33 amends Part 11 of the CEA mainly as it affects non-resident electors.
Clause 2 of Bill C-33 repeals section 11 of the CEA, which set out the classes of voters eligible to vote by mail pursuant to the procedures set out in Part 11 of the Act.44
Clause 18 contains a consequential amendment to section 95(1)(a) of the CEA, which specifies an exception to the stipulation that notices of confirmation of registration be sent to electors after a writ of election is issued. Currently, section 95(1)(a) specifies electors who “are referred to in paragraph 11(e)” (incarcerated electors).To take the repeal of section 11 into account, “are referred to in paragraph 11(e)” is replaced by “are incarcerated electors as defined in section 177.”
Clauses 25 through 29 amend Division 3 of Part 11 of the CEA, regarding electors who live outside Canada. Together, these clauses remove all of the disputed provisions limiting the right to vote of Canadians living abroad for more than five years that are at issue in the Frank case (see section 1.4.1 of this Legislative Summary).
Clause 25 replaces the current heading for Division 3 of Part 11 of the CEA – “Electors Temporarily Resident Outside Canada” – with “Electors Resident Outside Canada.”
Currently, under section 222 of the CEA, Elections Canada maintains a “register of electors who are temporarily resident outside Canada.” Section 222(1) specifies that to be included in the register an elector must:
Section 222(2) contains exceptions to the five year residence rule (for example for electors outside Canada who are employed in the federal or provincial public service, the Canadian Forces, or an international organization of which Canada is a member and to which Canada contributes).
Clause 27 replaces section 222 of the CEA. Under new section 222, the register is no longer designated for electors temporarily resident outside Canada, but is for electors who have filed an application for registration and special ballot and who resided in Canada “at any time.”
Clause 26 amends the definitions for the terms “elector” and “register” as they are used in Division 3 of Part 11, which relates to Canadian electors living outside Canada. The reference to living “temporarily” outside of Canada is removed from the definition for “elector.” The definition of “register,” which currently refers to the replaced section 222(1) of the CEA, is amended to refer instead to new section 222.
Section 223 of the CEA specifies what must be included in an application for registration and special ballot for citizens residing abroad.
Clause 28 repeals section 223(1)(b), which requires proof that an elector who has resided outside Canada for more than five consecutive years is eligible to vote under one of the exceptions specified in section 222(2).
Currently, sections 223(1)(d) to 223(1)(f) of the CEA require that an application for registration and special ballot include the following:
Clause 28 replaces these sections with the requirement that the application for special ballot for Canadians living abroad include “the address of the elector’s last place of ordinary residence in Canada before he or she left Canada.”
Thus, following the amendments to section 223 made by Bill C-33, an application for registration and special ballot by Canadians living abroad must include the following:
Clause 29 repeals section 226(f) of the CEA, which specifies that the CEO shall delete from the register of electors who are temporarily resident outside Canada the name of any elector who has lived outside Canada for more than five consecutive years (unless he or she qualifies under an exception to remain on the register).
Clause 41 is a transitional provision that specifies that if an application for registration and special ballot is made under section 223 of the CEA before the day that clause 28 comes into force, then Division 3 of Part 11 of the CEA as it read before that day applies for the purposes of the application.
Clause 34(1) of Bill C-33 replaces sections 509(1) and 509(2) of the CEA, once again giving the responsibility for the appointment of a Commissioner to the CEO, who is to consult with the Director of Public Prosecutions. The term of the appointment is lengthened to a non-renewable term of 10 years, and the Commissioner may be removed by the CEO, not the Director of Public Prosecutions, for cause.
Current section 509(3) of the CEA lists the categories of persons not eligible to be appointed as Commissioner, including those who are or have been:
Clause 34(2) of Bill C-33 repeals the last two categories so that someone who is or has been the CEO or one of his or her staff, or has been an election officer, is eligible to be appointed Commissioner of Canada Elections.
Current section 509.1 of the CEA places the position of Commissioner of Canada Elections within the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions. Clause 35 replaces this section, reversing provisions in the Fair Elections Act by putting the position back within the Office of the Chief Electoral Officer (amended section 509.1(1)).
Clause 35 also specifies that the Commissioner is considered the deputy head for the purpose of human resource management both under sections 11 to 13 of the Financial Administration Act and under the Public Service Employment Act (amended sections 509.1(2) and 509.1(3)). Under existing section 509.3, this enables the Commissioner to hire permanent and term employees.
Under current section 509.5 of the CEA, the Commissioner may authorize Director of Public Prosecutions employees to help him or her perform functions under the Act. Clause 36 of Bill C-33 amends this provision so that the employees will come from the Office of the Chief Electoral Officer. Such assistance would be in addition to the Commissioner’s ability to hire other temporary employees, including investigators, under existing sections 509.3 and 509.4.
Under current section 509.6 of the CEA, if certain additional expenses are required by the Commissioner to carry out his or her duties, funds may be drawn from the Consolidated Revenue Fund, but only on the certificate of the Director of Public Prosecutions. In keeping with the other changes in the bill, clause 37 of Bill C-33 amends section 509.6 to make the CEO responsible for authorizing such payments.
Under current section 510 of the CEA, the Commissioner, on his or her own initiative or in response to a complaint, may conduct an investigation. This investigation is to be conducted independently of the Director of Public Prosecutions. Given that the Commissioner’s office has been moved to the Office of the Chief Electoral Officer, clause 38 of Bill C-33 amends section 510 such that the Commissioner shall conduct investigations independently of the CEO.
Clause 40 of Bill C-33 adds sections 537.1 and 537.2 to the CEA. New section 537.1 requires the Commissioner to publish an annual report on the activities of his or her office during the year, without including the details of any investigation. New section 537.2 requires the Commissioner, as soon as possible after a general election, to make a report to the CEO that sets out any amendments that, in the Commissioner’s opinion, are desirable for better compliance with, and the better enforcement of, the CEA.
Clause 39 adds that the Commissioner’s proposed amendments must be included, separately, in the report that the CEO submits to the Speaker of the House of Commons as soon as possible after a general election under section 535 of the CEA. In that report, the CEO sets out any amendments that, in his or her opinion, are desirable for the better administration of the Act.
Clause 42 of Bill C-33 makes it clear that whoever holds the office of Commissioner of Canada Elections immediately before the day on which clause 34 (the new appointment procedure) comes into force continues in office and is deemed to have been appointed under section 509(1) of the CEA. The term of office of that Commissioner, however, begins on the date of his or her actual appointment.
Clause 43 deals with a number of matters that flow from the move of the Commissioner of Canada Elections position from the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions to the Office of the Chief Electoral Officer.
Under clause 43(2), any amount that was appropriated for defraying the costs of the Commissioner within the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions and that, on the day on which the clause comes into force, is unexpended is deemed, on that day, to be an amount appropriated for defraying the costs of the Office of the Chief Electoral Officer for the purposes of the powers, duties and functions of the Commissioner.
Under clause 43(3), any action, suit or other legal proceedings to which the Director of Public Prosecutions is a party that relate to the Commissioner’s role within his or her office and that are pending in any court immediately before the day on which the clause comes into force may be continued by or against the CEO in the same manner and to the same extent as they could have been continued by or against the Director of Public Prosecutions.
Finally, under clause 43(4), nothing in Bill C-33 is to be construed as affecting the status of any employees who, immediately before the day on which the clause comes into force, worked for the Commissioner within the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions, except that the employees shall, beginning on that day, occupy their position in the Office of the Chief Electoral Officer.
The consequential amendments discussed in these clauses relate to the moving of the position of Commissioner of Canada Elections from the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions to the Office of the Chief Electoral Officer.
Sections 13 to 26 of the Access to Information Act45 (ATIA) set out grounds on which access to documents requested under the ATIA may be refused. Section 16.3 states that the CEO may refuse to disclose any record requested under the ATIA that contains information that was obtained or created by or on behalf of a person who conducts an investigation, examination or review in the performance of their functions under the CEA. Current section 16.31 of the ATIA affords the Director of Public Prosecutions the same right to refuse to disclose records. Since, under Bill C 33, the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions no longer has within it the Commissioner of Canada Elections, this right of refusal is no longer relevant and so section 16.31 of the ATIA is repealed by clause 44 of Bill C-33.
Schedule IV of the Financial Administration Act46 lists entities that are considered to be part of the “core public administration.” One of those entities is the “portion of the federal public administration in the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions in which the employees referred to in section 509.3 of the CEA occupy their positions.” Clause 45 of Bill C-33 deletes that entity, and clause 46 replaces it with the “portion of the federal public administration in the Office of the Chief Electoral Officer in which the employees referred to in section 509.3 of the Canada Elections Act occupy their positions.” These are the employees working for the Commissioner of Canada Elections who will be switching offices.
This change ensures that the Commissioner of Canada Elections is listed properly in this schedule to the Financial Administration Act and so retains his or her human resources authorities as part of the core public administration under the Act when the Commissioner moves to the Office of the Chief Electoral Officer.
Current section 3(2) of the Director of Public Prosecutions Act47 states that, subject to sections 509.1(2) and 509.1(3) of the CEA, the Director has the rank and status of a deputy head of a department. As noted in section 2.5.3 of this Legislative Summary, Bill C-33 amends section 509.1 of the current CEA to move the position of Commissioner of Canada Elections from the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions to the Office of the Chief Electoral Officer. Clause 47 of Bill C-33 amends section 3(2) of the Director of Public Prosecutions Act to take this move into account. Clause 47 states that the Director has the rank and status of a deputy head of a department, without qualifications.
Current section 6(4) of the Director of Public Prosecutions Act states that a Deputy Director may act for or on behalf of the Director in the exercise of any of his or her powers or duties, except for the powers under section 509(1) of the CEA, which gives the Director of Public Prosecutions the power to appoint the Commissioner of Canada Elections. Because this power is being taken from the Director under Bill C 33, clause 48 of the bill removes the reference to it from section 6(4), so that a Deputy Director may act for the Director in all matters.
Section 16 of the Director of Public Prosecutions Act deals with the annual report of the Director, to be provided to the Attorney General of Canada, detailing the activities of the office of the Director in the immediately preceding fiscal year. Current section 16(1.1) requires that this report include a section, provided by the Commissioner of Canada Elections, on his or her activities under the CEA in that year. The Commissioner is not to include the details of any investigation.
Clause 49 of Bill C 33, which replaces current sections 16(1) and 16(1.1) with a new section 16(1), does not contain a reference to the Commissioner’s report, reflecting the removal of the Commissioner from the Director’s office. However, under this clause, the stipulation that the report not include details of any investigation under the CEA is retained: the new section states that there should be no report in relation to matters referred to in section 3(8), which specifies that the Director initiates and conducts prosecutions on behalf of the Crown with respect to any offences under the CEA, as well as any appeal or other proceeding related to such a prosecution.
Clause 50 states that the amendments contained in Bill C-33 will come into force either six months after the bill receives Royal Assent or on a day before that date when the CEO publishes a notice in the Canada Gazette stating that the necessary preparations for the bringing into operation of the Act have been made.
* Notice: For clarity of exposition, the legislative proposals set out in the bill described in this Legislative Summary are stated as if they had already been adopted or were in force. It is important to note, however, that bills may be amended during their consideration by the House of Commons and Senate, and have no force or effect unless and until they are passed by both houses of Parliament, receive Royal Assent, and come into force. [ Return to text ]
18 (1) The Chief Electoral Officer may implement public education and information programs to make the electoral process better known to the public, particularly to those persons and groups most likely to experience difficulties in exercising their democratic rights.The Chief Electoral Officer also had broad latitude in the use of communication media to transmit any information related to the electoral process (section 18(2), Canada Elections Act, before amendment by Bill C-23, the Fair Elections Act). [ Return to text ]
The absence of a mechanism to allow those who have been absent from Canada for five consecutive years or more to vote effectively deprives this latter group of individuals of their right to vote, a right protected by the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.He added:
The Special Voting Rules found in Part 11 of the Act should consequently be adjusted to allow individuals who have been absent for five years or more and who intend to resume residence in Canada to apply for registration or to remain listed in the register of electors absent from Canada, which is maintained by the Chief Electoral Officer.[ Return to text ]
18(2) The Chief Electoral Officer may, using any media or other means that he or she considers appropriate, provide the public, both inside and outside Canada, with information relating to Canada’s electoral process, the democratic right to vote and how to be a candidate.[ Return to text]
© Library of Parliament