Ontario Tories extend deadline to sign up to vote in leadership - Action News
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Toronto

Ontario Tories extend deadline to sign up to vote in leadership

Ontario's Progressive Conservative party, fending off criticisms about the system put in place to help select its new leader, has given members more time both to register for the right to vote and actually cast their ballots.

Members now have until Mar. 9 both to register for the right to vote and cast their ballots

Ontario PC members now have until noon on Mar. 9 to register for the right to vote and actually cast their ballots. (Justin Tang/Canadian Press)

Ontario's Progressive Conservative party, fending off criticisms about the system put in place to help select its new leader, has given members more time both to register for the rightto vote and actually cast their ballots.

A senior party source confirmedon Saturdaythat the organization has extended the voting deadline, pushing it back fromMar.8tonoononMar.9.

Earlier in the day, the party also announced it was extending the voter registration deadline for the second timein one week. Party members originally had to register to cast their online ballots byMar2, but the party extended that deadline toMar.5before ultimately setting it atnoononMar.7.

Some of the four candidates currently vying to take the party reins have criticized the complexity of the voting system put inplace for the leadership contest, which had to be organized afterformer leader Patrick Brown abruptly resigned in late January amidsexual misconduct allegations.

Brown, who vehemently denies all allegations against him, briefly tried to reclaim his old job by entering the leadership contest himself. He later withdrew from the field, however, saying his bid was taking a toll on his family and friends.

Four candidates remain in leadership race

Four candidates remain in the race for the party leadership -- former provincial legislator Christine Elliott, former Toronto city councillor Doug Ford, Toronto lawyer and business woman CarolineMulroney and social conservative advocate Tanya Granic Allen.

The Tories, whose membership management system was hacked in November, implemented a two-step process to verify the identity ofvoters, which requires party members to submit photo ID and wait to receive a special code in the mail.

Ontario PC leadership candidates, from left, Tanya Granic Allen, Caroline Mulroney, Christine Elliott and Doug Ford. (Justin Tang/Canadian Press)

At least one of the campaigns previously said that scores of members were still waiting for that document even as the votingperiod began.

"We're urging the party to make sure that people get their PINs so that they can vote because it's important that everyone, allmembers, have a chance to vote in this leadership," Mulroney said at a Toronto eventon Friday. "I am concerned about it."

Concerns have also been raised about the possibility of membership fraud through the use of prepaid credit cards. Somecandidates argue payments made through them cannot be tracked, which makes it impossible to verify that the person buying a membership isthe person who casts a ballot.

Party working to resolveconcerns

Hartley Lefton, chair of the leadership organizing committee, previously stated that the party was aware of and working to resolveconcerns around the mailing of voting documents.

Despite the changes to both the registration and voting windows, the party source said the date the new leader is announced has notchanged. The results of the leadership contest are still slated to be revealed onMarch 10.

Each party member gets one vote, which will be converted into electoral votes, the party said. There are up to 100 electoral votesper riding, to be allocated to each candidate in proportion to the votes they received in the riding.

The leadership will be determined using a ranked ballot, in whichvoters pick their preferred candidates and have the option to select a second, third and fourth choice.

The winner is whoever receives more than half the total electoral votes. If no one crosses that threshold on the first round, whoeverhas the fewest votes or less than 10 per cent gets eliminated and those votes get redistributed to whoever was marked as the second choice. This continues until a winner emerges.