Saturday, June 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Voting in federal election can be done safely: Tam

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Aug, 2021 03:45 PM
  • Voting in federal election can be done safely: Tam

Canada's chief public health officer is confident people will be able to cast ballots safely in an expected federal election, despite a fourth wave of COVID-19 fuelled by the highly contagious Delta variant.

Dr. Theresa Tam says safety protocols can be put in place to minimize the risk of voting in person, as has been done in recent provincial elections.

She says Canada's high rate of vaccinations also provides additional protection.

Tam notes that anyone who feels at risk can always opt to vote by mail instead.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is widely expected to pull the plug on his minority Liberal government this month for an election in mid to late September.

Trudeau continued Thursday to dodge questions about an imminent election call, insisting his government is focused on the pandemic and urging all Canadians to get vaccinated.

"There's definitely ways to vote safely," Tam said during a pandemic briefing Thursday.

"Certainly, if there's a mail-in option, people can take advantage of that … I think it's great to have an option but in-person voting can be done safely."

Tam's deputy, Dr. Howard Njoo, said it will be important for voters and politicians alike to follow local and provincial public health protocols during the campaign, particularly as they travel across the country.

"For me, with all the public measures that are in place, it shouldn't be an issue if we want to vote in person or use other means to vote," Njoo said in French.

"But the most important thing if there is to be an election will be to vote."

Chief electoral officer Stephane Perrault told The Canadian Press earlier this week that Elections Canada is ready to conduct an election that will be safe and produce trustworthy results, despite ongoing challenges of the pandemic.

The agency has stocked up on face masks, sanitizers, single-use pencils and plexiglass partitions to ensure the safety of voters and poll workers.

It is also braced to issue as many as five million mail-in ballots — a dramatic increase over the 2019 election when fewer than 50,000 Canadians chose to vote by mail.

Perrault warned that Canadians will not be able to learn final results on election night, as they're accustomed to doing.

That's because mail-in ballots will not be counted until the day after the election, in order to allow them to be received right up to the last minute before polls close and to give election officials time subsequently to carefully conduct checks to ensure no one who voted by mail also cast a ballot in person.

In a worst-case scenario, Perrault said it could take two to five days to complete the mail-in ballot count.

Depending on the number of mail-in ballots, that could mean Canadians will have to wait a day or more to learn the winners in close-fought ridings or even to find out which party will form government.

MORE National ARTICLES

Delta doubling B.C. COVID cases every 7 to 10 days

Delta doubling B.C. COVID cases every 7 to 10 days
COVID-19 cases in B.C. continued their upward march as the province reported more than 700 infections Tuesday over a four-day period, with more than half of those in the Interior where the vaccination rate is lower.

Delta doubling B.C. COVID cases every 7 to 10 days

Rain helps wildfire efforts, but isn't enough

Rain helps wildfire efforts, but isn't enough
Recent showers were a welcome relief to firefighters, but the rain wasn't enough to make long-lasting impacts on wildfires that continue to burn in British Columbia, a Wildfires BC operations director said Tuesday.

Rain helps wildfire efforts, but isn't enough

742 COVID19 cases over 4 days

742 COVID19 cases over 4 days
81.4% (3,773,442) of eligible people 12 and older in B.C. have received their first dose of COVID-19 vaccine and 67.3% (3,121,311) received their second dose.

742 COVID19 cases over 4 days

Jas Johal named the new host of CKNW primetime afternoon radio show

Jas Johal named the new host of CKNW primetime afternoon radio show
He will be the in the host chair of the Jas Johal show from 3-6pm weekday afternoons. He is replacing former afternoon host Lynda Steele who resigned in June. 

Jas Johal named the new host of CKNW primetime afternoon radio show

Ethics watchdog clears Trudeau in Pitfield hiring

Ethics watchdog clears Trudeau in Pitfield hiring
In a letter to Trudeau, Mario Dion says he's satisfied that the prime minister was not involved in the Liberal Research Bureau's decision to enter into a contract with Data Sciences Inc., a company owned by Tom Pitfield.

Ethics watchdog clears Trudeau in Pitfield hiring

B.C. court imposes house arrest on human smuggler

B.C. court imposes house arrest on human smuggler
He was convicted of facilitating, for profit, the entry of a foreign national across the Canada/U.S. border in July 2017. It's the man's second conviction for human smuggling.

B.C. court imposes house arrest on human smuggler