CBC News Federal Election
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Voter Toolkit

Election timing

What determines the date of an election? The short answer: "politics."

Peter Armstrong reports - runs 4:42AUDIO
Peter Armstrong reports for World at Six on fixed election dates.
(Runs 4:42)

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Canadian governments are elected for a maximum five-year term, but there is no legislated minimum. Rarely does a government serve out its full term, and it's up to the prime minister to decide when to go back to the people to seek re-election. This is usually in the fourth or early in the fifth year of a mandate, and a key factor in the timing is how confident the prime minister and his advisers are that conditions are favourable for re-election. When they feel the time is right, the prime minister advises the Governor General that Parliament should be dissolved and a general election held.

A different situation prevails in the United States, where politicians are elected for a fixed term of four years. The electoral calendar is so structured that there are national elections every two years. The president is elected for a four-year term, and half-way through his term, members of Congress face the voters to seek their four-year terms. There have been calls – primarily by the Conservative Party of Canada – for Canada to adopt a fixed-term system.

Two provincial governments have already decided to go that route: B.C. and Ontario. People in B.C. will go to the polls every four years on the second Tuesday in May, beginning in 2005. Ontario's premier Dalton McGuinty has proposed that Ontario voters go to the polls every four years, on the first Thursday in October. The law has yet to be passed. New Brunswick Premier Bernard Lord has also agreed to examine fixed election dates.

Only once in Canada has a government held office for more than the statutory five-year maximum. This was during the First World War, when the Conservatives under Robert Borden stayed in power for about a year beyond the expiration of their term in order to avoid the disruption an election would cause. However, Parliament did not sit during the extended period, so no laws could be passed. Government expenses were covered by warrants issued by the Governor General.


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