At the time this article was
written Scott Thorkelson was a member of Parliament for Edmonton-Strathcona
In thinking about electoral reform
we should step back for a moment to ask ourselves what we are trying to
achieve. The answer, I believe, is that we want full discussion and debate
about issues so that the electorate, can make an informed choice on election
day. We also want fairness between the contestants so no one party or one side
of an issue can dominate any other. I have a number of recommendations that I
think will help us achieve both these objectives and thereby encourage
involvement by more people in the electoral process.
Under Section 3 of the Charter of
Rights, Canadians have the right to vote but many people were missed in the
enumeration process during the last election thus were not eligible to vote.
The best solution to the problems we encountered would be a permanent voters
list. This voters list would be updated yearly and would be available to all
candidates the first day of an election. I would suggest that voters be
required to register at a post office, or a motor vehicle registration office,
and that records be maintained for each riding on a regional basis, so that we
could keep costs down.
A permanent voters list would
entail moving some responsibility from the government to the individual. I see
no problem with this and I would recommend that the voters list be kept
entirely confidential. I would like to suggest that persons could add
themselves to the list up until about three days before the day of the
election.
An annual or bi-annual enumeration
could be done,or alternatively, a card could be sent out to people on the
voters list and if it is returned, the registrar would have to identify who is
living at that household, and strike the previously registered voter off the
list. Also there should be some onus on a voter to re-register when they have
moved or to notify the central agency that they are moving. The discrepancy
which presently exists between urban and rural voters should be removed and a
uniform rule applied across the country. One of the advantages of a permanent
voters list is that the campaign period can be shortened, and secondly, a
permanent voters list would allow for advanced absentee voting, or even
registration on polling day, or close to polling day because everything would
be matched against the permanent voters list.
In Canada we have three national
parties competing, and they define the issues in a campaign. Individual
candidates seek to enhance their name recognition and promote those very
issues. Electors vote more for the party than the individual. Candidates are
tied to what the leader and party stand for. This is not such a bad thing
except that in a campaign almost all the resources are put toward promoting
name recognition and the party platform with very few being put toward
exploiting the differences between local candidates. There are great regional
differences and shades of issues that could be exploited or explained on a
riding by riding level.
More importantly, campaign
techniques are changing. Targeted persuasive mail is used extensively in the
United States. Some campaigns in the U.S. have mailed different pieces to a
household as many as sixteen to twenty times in the course of a campaign, all
addressing different issues and building support for a candidate. This should
not be confused with a mail drop to every household, but a mailout to certain, pre-selected
households. Postage and printing is very expensive and we will see more of this
in the future as demographic information is put on to computers, etc. For this
reason along with the increased cost of advertising and campaign materials,
riding campaigns need more resources. The national campaigns used this direct
mail technique in the last election.
I recommend that we should raise
the tax credit level now in place. Today you get a tax credit of up to
seventy-five percent of your donation up to one hundred dollars. I would argue
that tax credit levels should be increased so that one could receive up to
seventy-five percent of their donation up to two hundred dollars, and this
should be revised approximately every two years.
I believe strongly that what we
want to do in Canada is to encourage individuals to donate to the political
process. Over the past few years we have seen an explosion in the number of
individuals who have donated. In today's hectic society the way people may make
their contribution to the electoral process is by writing a cheque, whereas in
the past they may have come into a campaign office and stuffed envelopes, The
practice in the United States is that increasingly sophisticated techniques are
used for campaigns, and increasingly there are fewer and fewer volunteers, and
more and more paid staff and paid media. This trend has continued. More
resources are needed and it is better to receive them from a broad base of
people. However, I would not outlaw corporate donations.
Banks have been heavy contributors
to the political process, but this did not stop the Government from ruling in
favour of the American Express application to become a bank in Canada. The five
big banks were very much against this decision, and had lobbied it. Corporations
generally donate to support the process, not in return for expected favours.
Constituency associations between
elections should be able to issue tax receipts through Elections Canada, rather
than through their own central parties. During an election, individuals make
donations to candidates and they are processed through Elections Canada. During
other periods, one can donate to a constituency association and that is
processed through the central party which issues a tax receipt. One problem is
that the central party takes a cut of the money donated, sometimes twenty-five
percent, sometimes fifty percent which goes to pay for party operations. This
is a disincentive for Members of Parliament and constituency associations to
raise money and use money at the riding level to promote the electoral process
and to discuss and debate public issues. Elections Canada could do this on a
cost recovery basis. In light of MPs are being investigated for using House
money for partisan purposes, we should acknowledge that partisan work must be
done and it should be done through constituency associations and the political
process.
Canadians want to contribute to
their MP's work. In my riding I spend a lot of money to rent rooms for town
hall meetings, to advertise for these same meetings, and to rent rooms for
policy conferences so that I can listen to constituents. I have a volunteer
Task Force on Science and Technology for which I have need to rent rooms and pay
for breakfasts, and so on. I hold a Christmas Social and Summer Constituency
Barbecue. I mail out 5000 Christmas cards. So it is a very expensive process
just to maintain activities of one's own constituency association. If your
party does not have a sitting member it is even more difficult. To raise money
and then to see most of that money taken by the central party, tends to dampen
ability of the constituency association to be very active and we need to
encourage political involvement.
The advertising blackout now in
place is a breach of a the freedom of speech. Most political parties know that
the best strategy today is to load up or saturate the market toward the end of
the electoral period. There are some strategies which would call for enhancing
name recognition at the beginning and that is fine. But to have a blackout is
completely senseless. If through a permanent voters list we manage to shorten
the campaign by ten days, then I would reiterate my suggestion that we remove
the advertising blackout. We have limits on spending and it is a tactical
decision when to spend your advertising dollars.
Similarly I would not ban
third-party advertising during an electoral period but would require people who
advertise with the intent of influencing the electoral process to register and
report their expenditures to Elections Canada. A ban on third-party advertising
is a breach of a fundamental freedom and we should discourage that in a vibrant
democracy. Balanced against that is the doctrine of fairness, and while we
should not stop anyone from advertising, we certainly should monitor how much
they spend so that the people can look back and see what sort of resources they
have and why they are spending that money. These reports should be published.
Any ad should also indicate who is paying for it.
We need fewer regulations on the
process but more disclosure and outside limits on such things as spending. The
more rules that are in place, the more ways people will find to circumvent
them.
Voters are intelligent and sophisticated.
They can see through a lot of propaganda. If the Alberta Government decided to
spend a quarter of a million dollars explaining Free Trade, is Elections Canada
going to charge them? I think not. Third party advertising is good because it
identifies who the stakeholders are and from that, voters can ask why, and then
make their judgements.
My final recommendation is that we
apply election spending limits only to publicity materials in a campaign,
specifically those things that are used to promote the candidate such as
advertising, banners, signs, flyers, mailing brochures. How much one spends on
a fancy campaign office or on a fancy but useless computer system is
irrelevant. Those types of expenditures have very little to do with an
electoral victory. What has most to do with an electoral victory is how voters
perceive the party or the candidate to stand on an issue. Voters vote on
issues, not personalities, and not money. So what would tend to make a winning
campaign is how issues are put forward, in what light, and whether people agree
with those issue and ultimately vote for the candidate. So it makes no sense to
put any campaign expenditure limits on things such as furniture, computers,
coffee, and so on, because those expenditures have very little bearing on the
outcome of a campaign.