Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

Long-Term Canadian Expats Lose Right To Vote, Split Appeal Court Decides

The Canadian Press, 20 Jul, 2015 11:36 AM
    TORONTO — Allowing Canadians who have lived abroad for more than five years to vote in federal elections would be unfair to those who live in Canada, Ontario's top court ruled Monday.
     
    In a split decision, the Court of Appeal overturned a ruling that had restored the right of more than one million long-term expats to vote.
     
    Canada's "social contract" entails citizens submitting to laws because they had a voice in making them through voting, the ruling states.
     
    "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," Justice George Strathy wrote for the majority court.
     
    "This would erode the social contract and undermine the legitimacy of the laws."
     
    Strathy said the relevant part of the Canada Elections Act aimed to strengthen the country's system of government. While it infringed on the rights of the expats, he said, the infringement is reasonable and can be justified in a free and democratic society.
     
    Two Canadians living in the United States — Montreal-born Jamie Duong and Toronto-born Gillian Frank — launched the constitutional challenge, arguing the five-year rule was arbitrary and unreasonable. Both argued they had only left for educational and employment opportunities and still had strong attachments to Canada and a stake in its future.
     
    In May last year, Superior Court Justice Michael Penny threw out the voting ban, noting that mass murderers have the right to cast ballots but long-term expats who care deeply about the country do not. Penny also said expats could well be subject to Canadian tax and other laws.
     
    The Appeal Court said Penny's judgment was clouded by the government's assertion that expats "do not have the same connection" to Canada as residents.
     
    "This caused the debate to be cast as whether non-resident citizens were worthy of the vote," said Strathy. "As a result, he overlooked Canada's democratic tradition and the importance of the social contract between Canada's electorate and Parliament."
     
    In a dissenting opinion, Justice John Laskin said he considered Penny's judgment to be persuasive. He also said the government never argued that "preserving the social contract" justified the charter breach. Either way, Laskin said, it is not a good reason to limit voting rights.
     
    The rule disenfranchising Canadians who have been abroad for more than five years was enacted in 1993 amid debate about the strength of their ties to Canada and their knowledge of domestic politics.
     
    However, the five-year clock reset for those who returned even for short visits until 2007, when Elections Canada began enforcing a requirement for expats to "resume residency" in Canada to regain their right to vote abroad.
     
    The Conservative government had argued the five-year rule was reasonable and in line with international norms.
     
    Although the legislation technically applies to more than one million expats, records show only about 6,000 of them actually voted in the 2011 election.
     
    On Friday, the government won another court case — that one allowing it to bar the use of voter information cards as a valid form of identification.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Musician Ryan Lewis Joins HIV-AIDS Conference To Speak About Charity

    Musician Ryan Lewis Joins HIV-AIDS Conference To Speak About Charity
    VANCOUVER — Musician Ryan Lewis is in Vancouver, rubbing shoulders with a different kind of celebrity — some of the world's leading HIV-AIDS experts.

    Musician Ryan Lewis Joins HIV-AIDS Conference To Speak About Charity

    Technology Used In Hunt Of A Different Kind For North Atlantic Right Whales

    Technology Used In Hunt Of A Different Kind For North Atlantic Right Whales
    HALIFAX — Scientists are preparing to deploy an arsenal of high-tech gadgetry into the Atlantic Ocean to try to track down one of nature's biggest, but most elusive creatures in a whale hunt of a different kind.

    Technology Used In Hunt Of A Different Kind For North Atlantic Right Whales

    Newfoundland And Labrador To Examine Potential Hydro Sales To Ontario

    Newfoundland And Labrador To Examine Potential Hydro Sales To Ontario
    Natural Resources Minister Derrick Dalley says the commitment was made today with Ontario Energy Minister Bob Chiarelli at the 2015 Energy and Mines Ministers' Conference in Halifax.

    Newfoundland And Labrador To Examine Potential Hydro Sales To Ontario

    Tom Mulcair Jumps Election Starting Gun, Launches Campaign-style Tour Of Ontario

    Tom Mulcair Jumps Election Starting Gun, Launches Campaign-style Tour Of Ontario
    OTTAWA — Tom Mulcair is jumping the starting gun for this fall's election, hitting the campaign trail this week in the crucial battleground of Ontario.

    Tom Mulcair Jumps Election Starting Gun, Launches Campaign-style Tour Of Ontario

    Petition Calls For Truth And Reconciliation Commission To Be Election Issue

    Petition Calls For Truth And Reconciliation Commission To Be Election Issue
    WINNIPEG — A petition that calls on all political parties to incorporate the recommendations of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission into their election platforms has more than 1,200 signatures.

    Petition Calls For Truth And Reconciliation Commission To Be Election Issue

    Tekmira Abandons Ebola Drug Development, Changing Focus To Hepatitis B Cure

    Tekmira Abandons Ebola Drug Development, Changing Focus To Hepatitis B Cure
    TORONTO — One month after clinical trials for a once-promising Ebola drug were suspended, the company behind the treatment has suspended all research on the compound.

    Tekmira Abandons Ebola Drug Development, Changing Focus To Hepatitis B Cure