House committee calls for changes to Elections Act to thwart long ballot protests
OTTAWA — A House of Commons committee is calling on the government to make it harder for protest groups to sign up dozens of candidates in a single riding, after Elections Canada announced Wednesday that voters in an upcoming byelection in Quebec will use a write-in ballot because of the high number of candidates.
The Longest Ballot Committee has targeted ridings in a number of byelections dating back to 2022 and has said it is signing up candidates in the Montreal-area riding of Terrebonne.
The group has said it’s trying to call attention to the need for electoral reform. More recently, a spokesperson claimed its aim is to put pressure on lawmakers to appoint an independent citizens’ body to set election rules.
But the long ballots have caused problems for Elections Canada, which says they are more difficult to print and count and pose accessibility challenges for voters.

