Mandatory voting touted as cure for declining turnout
Last Updated: Monday, January 16, 2006 | 2:56 PM CT
CBC News
An analyst with a Winnipeg-based think tank is pushing for a mandatory voting law that would require all eligible voters to cast a ballot – or else.
Dennis Owens, a policy analyst at the Frontier Centre for Public Policy, says enforcing a mandatory vote – as proposed in a bill introduced in the Senate in 2004 – would help boost Canada's falling voting rate. The proposed bill would have punished non-voters with a $50 fine.
Voting is compulsory in more than 30 countries around the world, including Australia. In that country, Owens says, voter turnout hovers at over 90 per cent – far above the 60-per-cent turnout in Canada's last federal election.
- CANADA VOTES 2006: Voter turnout
"The mere fact that the law is in place means a lot of people just comply and vote," he said, adding that citizens could be excused from the fine if they have a legitimate reason for not voting.
Owens says having more citizens cast a ballot would also prevent "special interests" from having too great an effect on election results.
For example, he says, his own research into local school-board elections suggests voter turnout averaging around 17 per cent of all eligible voters – but of people who work in education industry, such as teachers and others who work for school boards, voter turnout is much higher: around 90 per cent.
That skews the results in a way that might not represent the opinions of the general population, he said.
Random voting?
Critics of the idea say it's contrary to democratic principles to force people to vote, and that doing so would result in uninformed people going to the polls and simply guessing or choosing a candidate randomly.
Others, such as Nancy Powderhorn, a committed non-voter who has never cast a ballot in a federal election, say it simply wouldn't work.
Powderhorn, a 47-year-old aboriginal university student, says she doesn't vote because she finds it pointless, saying governments never uphold treaty promises to aboriginal people.
"I've never benefited to date from any of these campaigns or parties that promise all these things. I just find that people as myself that are way out of distance from society we don't benefit nothing," she said.
The idea of mandatory voting appals her: "They've never done anything for me, and now they want to make me pay?"
Owens says mandatory voting could provide a solution for Powderhorn: an element of the mandatory voting bill would allow people to select "none of the above" on their ballot.
- FRONTIER CENTRE FOR POLICY ALTERNATIVES: More on mandatory voting

Share Tools
Latest Manitoba News Headlines
- Jets look to bounce back against Islanders
- The Winnipeg Jets will spend the vast majority of the next three weeks on home ice as they continue battling for a postseason berth. One reason the New York Islanders still have playoff hopes is their recent strong play on the road. more »
- SCENE: Artists gives valentines to lonely buildings
- Winnipeg artist Liz Garlicki uses heart-shaped LED installations in windows of old buildings, flashing the lights in Morse code to convey messages of love and loss. more »
- Man stabbed to death in Winnipeg
- Winnipeg has recorded its fourth homicide of 2012. more »
- Sudden death probed at Winnipeg hotel
- Police have blocked off a large area around a downtown Winnipeg hotel as they investigate an unexplained death. more »
Top News Headlines
- Whitney Houston's funeral to be held Saturday
- Pop star Whitney Houston's funeral service will be held Saturday in the New Jersey church where she first showcased her singing talents as a child. more »
- Fantino says Canada's F-35 jet purchase 'evolving'
- Canada's minister responsible for military procurement now appears open to adjusting the Defence Department's order for F-35 fighter jets, citing an economic environment "we may not have any control over." more »
- What to get your special someone on Valentine's Day
- For those looking for a last-minute Valentine's Day gift, here are some ideas — from the traditional to the outlandish. more »
- Sperm donor anonymity case moves to B.C. Appeal Court
- The B.C. government hopes to retain the anonymity of sperm donors as it launches a high-court appeal of a ruling last year won by a woman who wanted to know the identity of her father. more »
- Lac du Bonnet woman killed in highway crash
- Woman dies after being hit by vehicle in Winnipeg
- Manitoba jail inmates guilty of 2009 assault
- Manitoba wants ER death lawsuit thrown out
- Stobbe trial hears from blood-spatter expert
- Winnipeg homicide victim named
- Manitoba man dies after falling off moving SUV
- Boreal ducks threatened by climate change
- Blue Bombers lock up QB trio

