Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

'Unreasonable' to cancel election won by single vote, lawyer for Liberal MP says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Oct, 2025 10:12 AM
  • 'Unreasonable' to cancel election won by single vote, lawyer for Liberal MP says

The lawyer for a Quebec Liberal MP who won her riding in the April federal election by a single vote argued on Tuesday it would be unfair to other voters to cancel the result over one uncounted ballot.

Marc-Étienne Vien, lawyer for MP Tatiana Auguste, told a hearing in St-Jérôme, Que., that ordering a new election would be "unreasonable" and would effectively disenfranchise the tens of thousands of people who cast ballots in the Terrebonne riding, north of Montreal.

"To cancel the election is to deny the right to vote that was expressed by these 61,115 people," Vien said in Superior Court.

If a new vote were held, he said, some of the people who cast ballots in April may have since died or would be otherwise unable to vote in a new byelection. 

The Quebec Superior Court agreed to hear the case after former Bloc Québécois candidate Nathalie Sinclair-Desgagné challenged the election results in the riding. She launched the challenge after a Bloc voter revealed that her special ballot was returned to her — and not counted — because of an error in the address on the envelope provided by Elections Canada.

Auguste initially won the riding, but it flipped to Sinclair-Desgagné after the votes went through a validation process. A judicial recount completed on May 10, however, concluded the Liberals had won the riding by one vote.

Sworn statements filed in the case show that an election employee discovered he had mistakenly printed his own postal code on several special ballots about three weeks before the election day.

Vien told the court that there are well-known risks to voting by mail, and that by law, it's not Elections Canada's responsibility to ensure mail-in ballots arrive at polling stations. Vien described the error as "banal," and said human error can happen to anyone and result in a few votes not being counted for a variety of reasons.

"These are things that happen," he said. "To allow a contestation of elections on this basis doesn't seem appropriate." 

He also said it's not a given that the ballot in question affected the outcome of the election. 

He said three ballots marked for the Bloc Québécois were found in garbage cans at the polling station, and that they were included in the final vote tally despite not being placed in the ballot box by the voter. He suggested those votes could be discounted because their authenticity could not be confirmed — meaning Auguste's margin of victory should have been four votes and not one.

Sinclair-Desgagné's lawyer, Stéphane Chatigny, said the one-vote decision corresponded to a margin of victory of 0.000016.

"I submit that this is the illustration of the degree of certainty we have in the identity of the winner of the election in Terrebonne," he said.

Denying an eligible voter the right to vote constitutes an irregularity that affected the outcome of the election, he said, pushing back against the suggestion that the error was banal.

A lawyer for Elections Canada told the hearing that he would not take a position on Sinclair-Desgagné's challenge. He said the organization acknowledged that an error had taken place during the election. Daniel Baum referred to a 2012 Supreme Court of Canada decision that set a high bar for annulling elections based on administrative errors. 

The decision, he said, found the right to vote to be of utmost importance, but it also concluded that elections in Canada are "not designed to achieve perfection." 

"It's a big, complex machine, and errors are inevitable," Baum said. 

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Spencer Colby

MORE National ARTICLES

New police unit bolsters B.C.'s response to human trafficking

New police unit bolsters B.C.'s response to human trafficking
The counter human trafficking unit (CHTU) will enhance the detection, investigation and prosecution of human trafficking crimes, while expanding support for victims and targeting organized crime networks operating in British Columbia.

New police unit bolsters B.C.'s response to human trafficking

Poilievre and the Alberta byelection debate

Poilievre and the Alberta byelection debate
The Camrose and District Chamber of Commerce hosted a candidates' forum featuring 10 of the people who are vying to represent Battle River—Crowfoot in the Aug. 18 byelection.

Poilievre and the Alberta byelection debate

PM Carney cabinet to meet amid Palestine statehood talk, U.S. trade discussions

PM Carney cabinet to meet amid Palestine statehood talk, U.S. trade discussions
The meeting, set for 2 p.m. ET., comes as trade talks escalate and as Canada's closest peers move toward recognizing a Palestinian state.

PM Carney cabinet to meet amid Palestine statehood talk, U.S. trade discussions

Bank of Canada holds key rate at 2.75% as economy shows resilience to tariffs

Bank of Canada holds key rate at 2.75% as economy shows resilience to tariffs
The central bank’s policy rate remains at 2.75 per cent after a third consecutive hold.

Bank of Canada holds key rate at 2.75% as economy shows resilience to tariffs

Two Canadians and previous winner Kiran Desai on the Booker Prize long list

Two Canadians and previous winner Kiran Desai on the Booker Prize long list
“The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny,” the 677-page tale of two young Indians making their way in the United States, is one of 13 books announced Tuesday as semifinalists for the prestigious 50,000-pound ($67,000) prize. The contenders include authors from nine countries on four continents.

Two Canadians and previous winner Kiran Desai on the Booker Prize long list

Wildfire near Lytton, B.C., larger than initial estimate after aerial mapping

Wildfire near Lytton, B.C., larger than initial estimate after aerial mapping
The service's latest update on the Cantilever Bar wildfire says it is now measured at 4.6 square kilometres, up from the 1.5 square kilometres reported earlier this week.

Wildfire near Lytton, B.C., larger than initial estimate after aerial mapping