elections
-
Foolish Hope
When I blogged last month about Frank v. Canada (Attorney-General), 2014 ONSC 907, the decision of Ontario’s Superior Court of Justice striking down the provisions of the Canada Elections Act disenfranchising Canadians who reside abroad for more than five years, I expressed the hope that “the government [would] save[] taxpayers money by not appealing.” Justice Penny’s ruling, Continue reading
-
Voice After Exit!
In a decision released last week, Frank v. Canada (Attorney-General), 2014 ONSC 907, Ontario’s Superior Court of Justice held that the disenfranchisement of Canadian citizens who have been resident abroad for more than five years is unconstitutional. The provisions of the Canada Elections Act at issue in Frank limited the right to vote from abroad Continue reading
-
Nouveaux médias, vieille loi
La semaine dernière, le Directeur général de élections a exigé des producteurs d’un court documentaire intitulé La charte des élections et dénonçant la Charte de la honte du PQ comme une tactique électoraliste qu’ils cessent d’en faire la promotion et la distribution. Dans mon billet sur le sujet, j’avais estimé que le DGE avait probablement Continue reading
-
Absurde censure
Un employeur québécois a-t-il le droit de dire à ses employés comment voter (ou ne pas voter)? C’est la question que pose un article paru dans La Presse ce matin. Louise Leduc écrit que le patron d’une usine de Delson « a envoyé une lettre à son personnel lui enjoignant de ne pas voter pour le Continue reading
-
Ce que l’on sème
Depuis au moins les années 70, les penseurs et les politiciens « progressistes » se sont beaucoup préoccupés du rôle de l’argent en politique. Ils ont également cherché à donner aux partis politiques une place centrale dans le cadre du débat pré-électoral, comme je le soulignais ici. L’idée était que les riches, par leurs contributions Continue reading
-
ID OK
It seems like a long time since I’ve blogged about a court decision, especially one not by the Supreme Court. Today is a perfect day to return to that particular genre, because the decision I want to write about, Henry v. Canada (Attorney General), 2014 BCCA 30, concerns the constitutionality of voter identification requirements for Continue reading
-
Undue Spiritual Influence
One of the most fascinating cases ever decided by the Supreme Court of Canada is one that you have never heard about ― or at any rate hadn’t heard about until two weeks ago, if you read Yves Boisvert’s account of it in La Presse. The case is Brassard v. Langevin, (1876-77) 1 S.C.R. 145 ― Continue reading
-
Not Private Parties
The development and use of massive voter databases and sophisticated “micro-targeting” techniques by political parties are raising concerns about the privacy rights of the people targeted by these efforts. When I wrote about the use of these techniques by the Obama campaign in the last presidential election in the United States, I suggested that “the Continue reading
-
Then and Now
Much has been said and written in the last few years, both in Canada and in the United States, about the role of money in politics and also about the importance of electoral procedures in enfranchising ― or disenfranchising ― citizens. But this is not a new problem, as a description of the English electoral Continue reading
-
Voice after Exit, European Edition
I wrote last year about a court challenge by two Canadian citizens living in the United States to a provision of the Canada Elections Act, S.C. 2000 c. 9 (CEA), which prohibits Canadians who have resided abroad for more than five consecutive years (except members of the Canadian forces, civil servants, diplomats, and employees of international organization) from Continue reading
