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Activists load up ballot in Toronto-area byelection with 40 candidates to protest Trudeau

A grassroots organization is pushing for election reform — making problems for the Liberals as they try to win their first test with voters since last year’s election

People arrive at Clarkson Presbyterian Church in Mississauga to vote in the 2019 Federal election, Monday October 21, 2019.
People arrive at Clarkson Presbyterian Church in Mississauga to vote in the 2019 Federal election, Monday October 21, 2019. Photo by Peter J Thompson/Postmedia

Activists hoping to disrupt a Toronto-area byelection Monday to protest Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s broken promises on electoral reform have loaded up the ballot with 40 candidates, making problems for the Liberals as they try to win their first test with voters since last year’s election.

Forty candidates are in the running to replace outgoing Liberal Mississauga-Lakeshore MP Sven Spengemann, who earlier this year retired from federal politics to take a job with the United Nations.

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Peter Graefe, associate professor of political science for McMaster University, told the National Post he doesn’t share in popular narratives painting Monday’s byelection as a potent litmus test on either the government or opposition.

“In the grand scene of things, it’s really meaningless,” he said.

“We’re three years away from the next election in terms of fixed election dates — two years if we go by the timing of the NDP/Liberal accord.”

He said what’ll most likely be a low-turnout byelection in the heartland of Liberal Toronto-area support won’t reveal much about how the rest of Canada feels about either the Trudeau Liberals or the Poilievre Tories.

“It’s a seat where the (conservatives) proved to be competitive,” Graefe said.

“Beating the former provincial finance minister in the riding he’d held provincially would be a feather in their cap.”

While Spengemann has won the seat three times, he did so by relatively slim margins.

In 2021, he defeated Conservative candidate Michael Ras by only 3,500 votes.

Running for the Liberals is Charles Sousa, a Liberal MPP for 11 years serving as labour, immigration and finance minister.

When asked if he’s considering Monday’s byelection as a test, Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre told reporters in French on Thursday that winning in Mississauga-Lakeshore won’t be easy.

“It’s a difficult riding for us,” he said, adding the party’s candidate — Peel Regional Police Sergeant Ron Chhinzer — is reflective of the riding’s middle-class residents and has “real plans” to combat both inflation and crime.

“Those are people’s priorities out there.”

Most notable on Monday’s ballot are 34 independents — with all but three listing Winnipeg-based election activist Kieran Szuchewycz as their official agent.

Szuchewycz and his brother Tomas — also a candidate in the election — are founders of the Longest Ballot Committee, a grassroots organization pushing for election reform.

In 2017, Kieran successfully convinced an Alberta judge to strike portions of the Elections Act requiring a $1,000 cash deposit to run for federal office — a case stemming from his disqualification to run against then-PM Stephen Harper in his Calgary riding in 2015.

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The committee declined to offer a spokesperson, directing inquires instead to candidates and statements posted online.

“People remain frustrated with the archaic and out-of-touch political system which our leaders have refused to reform, a system that results in a winner earning a minority of votes but gaining all the power,” the statement read.

Among these ‘protest candidates’ is Rhinoceros party leader and  committee de facto spokesperson Sebastian CoRhino, who told the National Post it’s foolish to expect election laws to change on their own, considering it’s up to the winners of the most recent election to make that happen.

“The people who win the election are not likely to put things inside the act that will be a disadvantage for them,” he said.

“It’s like if the winner of the Stanley Cup could make up the rules for the next hockey season.”

During the 2015 campaign, Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau ran under a banner of election reform, promising that election would be Canada’s last under first-past-the-post, and shifting towards proportional representation.

That never happened.

CoRhino said the campaign has attracted a lot of attention, including an alleged phone call from Chief Electoral Officer Stéphane Perrault.

That conversation, which CoRhino said occurred shortly after their campaign started, included concerns that having so many names on the ballot would create problems with accessibility and voters with vision problems.

“I was surprised,” he said.

“He said there could be accessibility problems, and I was like ‘yeah, but the ballot in Vancouver in last month’s municipal elections was bigger.'”

Voters in Vancouver chose councillors from 59 candidates listed on a plurality block ballot.

Having a wide representation of non-Mississauga residents on the ballot was important, said the resident of Rimouski, Qc.

“Most people aren’t aware it’s possible — people say to me, ‘I didn’t know you can be a candidate in a place where you don’t live,'” he said.

“A lot of MPs and Minister don’t live in their riding, and some don’t even care about their riding — they just got there because it was an easy place to win.”

Among the slate of out-of-town candidates is Donovan Eckstrom of Grand Prairie, Alta., who told the National Post he plans on bringing a little western Canada to the Toronto suburb.

“I saw that they had a ‘Rodeo Dr.’ in Mississauga, so I wanted to make that the place were rodeos happen,” he said.

Eckstrom, who has previously run for office under the Rhinoceros Party banner, said he too shares in the desire to strengthen Canada’s democracy.

“Right now in Mississauga—Lakeshore, there is a non-zero chance somebody could get four per cent of the vote and become the member of parliament,” he said.

“This is completely legal, it’s completely allowed, but this is the stuff that let parachute candidates happen, this is the only way some ridings can get members to run.”

In order to accommodate all of the names and their party affiliations into a readable and accessible ballot, Elections Canada upsized their ballots.

Leaked photos from advance polls confirm the ballot’s sheer size.

A regular four-to-12 candidate ballot is 15 cm. wide and 10 to 18 cm. long.

According to Elections Canada spokesperson Matthew McKenna, Monday’s triple-folded, 40 candidate, double-column ballot will be over 30 cm. wide and 43 cm. long — a bit larger than a single page of the Toronto Sun.

• Email: bpassifiume@postmedia.com | Twitter: @bryanpassifiume