Tom Mulcair wary of election reforms proposed by 'serial cheaters' - Action News
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Politics

Tom Mulcair wary of election reforms proposed by 'serial cheaters'

NDP Leader Tom Mulcair says his party will move to send the government's proposed election law reforms to committee before the first vote in the House of Commons, accusing the Conservatives of being "serial cheaters" with ulterior motives.

NDP Leader Tom Mulcair wants election law reforms studied in committee before 1st vote in House

NDP Leader Tom Mulcair says his party will move to send the government's proposed election law reforms to committee before the first vote in the House of Commons, accusing the Conservatives of being "serial cheaters" with ulterior motives. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

NDP Leader Tom Mulcair says his partywill move to send the government's proposed election law reformsto committee before the first vote in the House of Commons, accusing the Conservatives of being "serial cheaters" with ulterior motives.

Mulcair said if the bill is true to its name the Fair Elections Act then the government should accept the party's offer to have experts look at the bill and testify in front of committee along with Canadians.

But, he said, if "this is mostly about making life easier for the Conservatives, who are serial cheaters in federal general elections," then he expects the government to limit debate in the House and rush through the proposed law.

"I am quite concerned that this is the first offering of a government and a party, again, with a track record proven of constantly cheating in elections," Mulcair said.

The Fair Elections Act, a 247-page bill tabled Tuesday, is being debated today in the House of Commons.

Mulcair spoketoreporters following the final meeting with his caucus before the government's Feb. 11 budget.

At an earlier news conference the NDP outlined items that it would like to see in next Tuesday's budget, including a cap on ATM banking fees,the restoration of the ecoENERGY home retrofit program, a curb on credit card fees and an end to the practice of companies charging consumers for receiving paper bills.

Favours Conservatives

Mulcair said an exemption for some fundraisingcosts, which would let parties spend freely rather than counting the cost of contacting previous donors under their election spending cap, is just one of the measures in the bill that will "favour the Conservatives." The Conservative Party has been collecting and keeping detailed information on their donors and voters for years, a system to which the NDP and Liberals are scrambling to catch up.

"They're tipping the scales a little bit in their favour," Mulcair said.

The NDP leader pointed to a provision to eliminate vouching, a process that sees someone at the polling station swear that someone without identification or a voter informationcard is who they claim to be, and eligible tocast a ballot at that polling station.

The bill would also eliminate voter informationcards as a method of identification, requiring government ID to cast a ballot.

NDPdemocratic reform critic Craig Scott pursued the issue in question period, arguing that 100,000 people voted in 2011 after being vouched for.

"This included aboriginal citizens, low-income people, new Canadians, students and people with disabilities. So the question is why is the government making it harder for these Canadians to exercise their right to vote?" Scott said.

Minister of State forDemocratic Reform Pierre Poilievresaid that method had a 25 per cent error rate.

"We're not [making it harder], we're making it easier by requiring Elections Canada to advertise to these very people which types of identification are required to vote," he said.

"The reality is vouching is not safe, it is not secure, and after the Fair Elections Act is passed, it won't be allowed."