Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Groups Ask To Appeal Ruling In Favour Of Ban On Voter Information Cards As ID

The Canadian Press, 24 Jul, 2015 01:13 PM
     
     
    In a motion to Divisional Court, they request leave to appeal a ruling in which a judge refused to suspend a provision of the Fair Elections Act on the grounds that it would be too risky.
     
    "Clearly, an appeal would consider matters of public significance," the application states.
     
    The Council of Canadians, Canadian Federation of Students and three voters had asked Ontario Superior Court for an injunction against the government's ban on allowing registered voters to use voter information cards as proof of address at the polls.
     
    In his decision July 17, Justice David Stinson refused, despite finding the challenge raised a serious issue and that some voters could suffer "irreparable harm" by being denied the right to cast ballots.
     
    Suspending a single provision of the act so close to a federal election — which must happen on or before Oct. 19 — was problematic, Stinson said.
     
    In a statement Friday, Garry Neil, executive director of the Council of Canadians, said Stinson had made errors.
     
    "The judge failed to follow Supreme Court of Canada jurisprudence underscoring the need to protect the right to vote as fundamental to our democratic system," Neil said. 
     
    The two groups and three individual voters argue parts of the Fair Elections Act enacted last year are unconstitutional. They maintain that thousands of people could be disenfranchised by the new law — mostly students, aboriginals, seniors and the homeless.
     
    However, because the case can't be resolved before the election, they asked Stinson to grant an injunction against the provision that ends the use of voter information cards as ID.
     
    "He failed to consider the evidence of benefits and harms before him in deciding whether the balance of convenience favoured granting the relief requested," the appeal application states.
     
    "Had he done so, it would have been clear and obvious...that the balance of convenience favoured granting an injunction."
     
    Oral arguments on the leave application are to be heard in Toronto July 30, with a decision expected the following week. If successful, the actual appeal would be argued Aug. 28.
     
    The government stripped Canada's chief electoral officer of the right to recognize information cards as a valid form of identification, saying the new rules will prevent voter fraud.
     
    In the 2011 election, as many as 400,000 people used voter information cards as official ID on election day. The government notes 45 acceptable forms of ID are available.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Tobacco Companies To Fight Ruling Forcing Them To Make Initial $1-Billion Payout

    Tobacco Companies To Fight Ruling Forcing Them To Make Initial $1-Billion Payout
    MONTREAL — The country's largest tobacco companies are set to return to court today to fight a ruling that they must pay out more than a billion dollars in settlement money in the coming weeks.

    Tobacco Companies To Fight Ruling Forcing Them To Make Initial $1-Billion Payout

    U.S. One Step Closer To Extraditing Accused Chinese Hacker From Canada

    U.S. One Step Closer To Extraditing Accused Chinese Hacker From Canada
    VANCOUVER — The United States has vaulted another hurdle in its bid to extradite a Chinese national living in British Columbia who is accused by the FBI of pilfering American military trade secrets.

    U.S. One Step Closer To Extraditing Accused Chinese Hacker From Canada

    Appeal Court Won't Order New Trial For Calgary Woman Who Put Newborns In Garbage

    Appeal Court Won't Order New Trial For Calgary Woman Who Put Newborns In Garbage
    CALGARY — Alberta's highest court has upheld two infanticide convictions for a Calgary woman who threw her newborns in the garbage.

    Appeal Court Won't Order New Trial For Calgary Woman Who Put Newborns In Garbage

    Ontario Fur Farmers Rattled After Thousands Of Mink Let Out During Two Break-ins

    Ontario Fur Farmers Rattled After Thousands Of Mink Let Out During Two Break-ins
    TORONTO — Fur farmers in southwestern Ontario are rattled after more than 8,000 mink were released during two recent break-ins.

    Ontario Fur Farmers Rattled After Thousands Of Mink Let Out During Two Break-ins

    Soldiers In Bright- Orange Coveralls Fight Fires In Northern Saskatchewan

    Soldiers In Bright- Orange Coveralls Fight Fires In Northern Saskatchewan
    MONTREAL LAKE, Sask. — Soldiers are digging up hot spots and plowing through dense brush and blackened trees as they continue to protect the remote Saskatchewan community of Montreal Lake.

    Soldiers In Bright- Orange Coveralls Fight Fires In Northern Saskatchewan

    Campaign To Help Isolated Reserve Without Clean Water Intensifies

    Campaign To Help Isolated Reserve Without Clean Water Intensifies
    A multi-faith group in Winnipeg is kicking off 10 days of action in support of Shoal Lake 40 First Nation.

    Campaign To Help Isolated Reserve Without Clean Water Intensifies