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London

Ontario moves to axe ranked ballots from municipal elections

The Ontario government is looking to scrap the option allowing municipalities to use ranked ballots, the system used in London, Ont. during the 2018 municipal council election.

The PC government introduced the bill Tuesday, tagged onto COVID-19 recovery legislation

A voter casts their ballot.
The Ontario government that the measure will keep the voting process consistent across municipal, provincial and federal elections. (Chris Young/Canadian Press)

The Ontario government is looking to scrap the option allowing municipalitiesto use ranked ballots during civic elections.

A new bill released by theConservative government on Tuesday focuses on liability protection for workersand businesses against COVID-19 exposure-related lawsuits.It includeschanges to theMunicipal Elections Act, 1996, which would remove the ranked ballot options for municipal council elections, if passed.

"Our government is maintaining predictability, and consistency to municipal elections, while better respecting taxpayers' dollars,"a spokesperson for theMinistry of Municipal Affairs and Housing wrote in an email to CBC News. "Now is not the time for municipalities to experiment with costly changes to how municipal elections are conducted."

"Our new proposed changes would bring predictability to municipal elections, at a time when Ontarians are focused on their health and safety."

The government added that the measure wouldkeep the voting process consistentacross municipal, provincial and federal elections.

London, Ont. was the first municipality in the countryto adopt the ranked ballot system.

A ranked-choice ballot
London, Ont. was the first municipality to adopt ranked ballots during the 2018 municipal election. (Hala Ghonaim/CBC)

The proposed changeisdisappointing for electoral reform advocates.

"There was a lot of pride in London to be the first to ditch the first-past-the post and for the city to be innovative and try something new. For the provincial government to take that away from a democratic elected council is really inappropriate."said Dave Meslin, creative director ofUnlock Democracy Canada, an electoral reform advocacy group.

"This overturns London city council's democratic choice to use ranked ballots, it overturnsthe democraticresult of referendums in Kingston and Cambridge,and it robs all 444 municipalities of Ontario of being able to experiment locally and try a new system."

London adopted the ranked ballot system during the 2018 civic election, but other municipalities including Cambridge and Kingston had signaled they would join London inholding a ranked ballot vote in 2022

Unlike the first-past-the-post system, ranked ballots allow voters to rank each candidate as their first, second or third choice.

A candidate needs 50 per cent plus one vote in order to win. If no candidate reaches that number during the firstballot, the candidate with the fewest votes is eliminated and the second-choice ballots are counted.The process is repeated until one candidatereaches 50 percent plus one.