Electoral reform, dinosaurs and ‘spite’: the ‘Longest Ballot’ protest, explained
OTTAWA — More than 200 candidates are running in the Battle River-Crowfoot byelection, though only a handful have the support of official parties. Most of the rest are linked to a protest movement that’s looking to change the way elections are conducted in the country.
The front-runner in the race, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, is seeking a path back to the House of Commons after losing his Ottawa-area riding in the last federal election. Poilievre has attacked the Longest Ballot Committee’s efforts to stack the ballot with a large number of candidates as a “blatant abuse” of democracy.
Here’s what the Longest Ballot Committee says it wants, what its opponents say needs to change and how Elections Canada is planning to handle the Aug. 18 vote.
Why are these protests happening?
