WhatFinger

Plan to defy Canada's election law by posting real-time voting results on election night

Twitterers beware



There are certain Twitterers who better make sure Elections Canada is not on their followers list. I am referring to those in the Twitterverse who plan to defy Canada's election law by posting real-time voting results on election night.

If they do so they will be violating Section 329 of the Canada Elections Act which prohibits the "premature transmission" of election results. In other words, you can't reveal how Canadians have voted in a region where the polls are closed, to Canadians living in a region where the polls are still open. And if anyone thinks violating this law is akin to a harmless prank, they better think again. The fact is the bureaucrats at Elections Canada enforce Section 329 with a Spanish-Inquisition like zealotry. Just ask Paul Bryan. Back in 2000 Paul, a British Columbia software developer, decided he would defy the law because he believed it infringed on free speech. So, acting on principle, he posted real-time election results from Atlantic Canada on his website. This was back in the Stone Age era of the Internet when there was no Facebook, no Twitter, no Craigs List. (How did we survive?) Please note, Paul didn't project winners. He didn't provide analysis. He simply gave British Columbians a chance to see how voters in Newfoundland were casting their ballots. Elections Canada took notice of this egregious crime and took immediate action to safeguard democracy. The next day they dispatched police to Paul's home and officially charged him with a crime. The police also seized his computer hard drive and other equipment. Meanwhile, Stephen Harper, who back then was still president of the National Citizens Coalition, was outraged with the bullying ways of Elections Canada. So the NCC took up Paul cause and challenged the law in the courts. Unfortunately, in an incredibly short-sighted ruling, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled against Paul and sided with Elections Canada, so the black out rule remains in effect. Of course, it's a law which is now probably unenforceable. Modern communication technology has rendered it impossible to keep track of all possible violators. As one of the lawyers arguing against Section 329 told the Supreme Court justices, "The only way to get fairness is to get rid of Section 329 or to shut the power off on election day so no one gets any results." Of course, knowing how Elections Canada bureaucrats think, they might just decide to shut off the power, rather than allow free speech.

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Gerry Nicholls——

Gerry Nicholls is a Toronto writer and a senior fellow with the Democracy Institute. His web site is Making sense with Nicholls


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