Can internet voting boost turnout without risk?
The Canadian Press
Posted: Nov 9, 2011 11:57 AM ET
Last Updated: Nov 9, 2011 1:25 PM ET
A voter walks out of a Winnipeg polling station on voting day in the Manitoba election, Oct. 4, 2011. Re-elected Premier Greg Selinger said he'd consider trying online voting after the province saw its second-lowest voter turnout. (John Woods/Canadian Press)
Low voter turnout has become a lot like bad weather — something everyone talks about, at least around election time, but something that seems beyond remedy.
Since various appeals to democratic principles have failed to move people off their couches to vote, some governments are considering internet voting to try and increase voter turnout.
Electronic voting has already been used in some provincial party leadership races and in municipal elections from Huntsville, Ont., to Halifax.
But it also has staunch opponents, who warn it can be hacked and suggest it may not do anything to engage voters who are turned off politics.
"Technology . . . can be hacked to distort voter results in ways that can never be traced," warns Duff Conacher, of the Ottawa-based advocacy group Democracy Watch.
'Anybody that suggests to you that nobody could ever possibly break into any computer system, well, all you have to do is read the papers. What you have to do is you have to mitigate that risk. '—Dean Smith, President, InteliVote Systems
Personal identification numbers, which are usually mailed to people's homes in order to allow them to vote electronically, can be stolen from mailboxes and used by other people, Conacher said. He also believes there is no way to prevent one person in a household from collecting PINs and casting ballots for every family member.
There are also more high-tech concerns.
J. Alex Halderman, an assistant professor of computer science at the University of Michigan, hacked into a pilot e-voting project last year in the District of Columbia. D.C. officials had invited the public to test the system's security as part of an open-source initiative.
"Within 36 hours of the system going live, our team had found and exploited a vulnerability that gave us almost total control of the server software, including the ability to change votes and reveal voters' secret ballots," Halderman wrote on his blog.
The security concern is a major reason politicians have approached e-voting with caution.
Manitoba Premier Greg Selinger has said internet voting is something he would look at, following a 56 per cent voter turnout in the province's Oct. 4 election. It was the second-lowest turnout in Manitoba's history, even though Elections Manitoba opened more advance polling stations than ever and allowed all voters to cast ballots at any advance poll in the province.
Turnout was even worse in the recent Ontario election. A record-low 49.2 per cent of eligible voters exercised their right, despite advance polls being open for more days than ever before.
Cities leading the way online
Some of those who have adopted internet voting have seen a turnaround.
In Huntsville — one of 34 municipalities in Ontario that allowed e-voting last year — voter turnout rose sharply.
"Ours did go up from just around 30 per cent up to 46 per cent . . . and I feel that it will be even better the next time," says town clerk Kathleen Gilchrist.
There were those in Huntsville who worried about hacking, but Gilchrist says the town chose a system operated by Halifax-based Intelivote Systems Inc., which had been previously tested for vulnerability in Vaughan, Ont.
"They hired a company to see whether they could . . . break into the system and they couldn't."
The vote in Huntsville went off with only a minor hitch — one that didn't involve a security breach. The system was overloaded in the last hour of voting by candidates and their workers, who were monitoring activity. As a result, some voters were blocked and the voting deadline had to be extended by an hour to accommodate everyone.
Intelivote has also handled political party leadership races such as the British Columbia Liberal vote last February and company president Dean Smith says while no system is perfect, they use encrypted data, security audits and other measures to prevent hacking.
"Anybody in the world that suggests to you that nobody could ever possibly break into any computer system, well, all you have to do is read the papers," Smith says.
"What you have to do is you have to mitigate that risk. You have to make sure that the processes, the procedures, the people — all the variables that are included in good security — are in place."
There were no security breaches reported in the 34 Ontario municipal elections Intelivote handled last year and Smith says voter turnout increased between four and 20 per cent.
Politics or polling stations the problem?
Gilchrist suggests turnout increased because of the ease of internet voting. The disabled, people who live far from polling stations and others were more likely to vote because the internet was an easy option.
But Democracy Watch remains unconvinced. The advocacy group suggests voter turnout is on a steady, long-term decline because voters are turned off politics, not because casting a ballot is inconvenient.
"The way to increase voter turnout is to actually increase the accountability of candidates and politicians," Conacher maintains.
Democracy Watch offers a list of recommendations, including proportional representation and an "honesty in politics" law that would allow voters to file complaints with a provincial commissioner whenever they feel a politician has broken a campaign promise.
Back in Huntsville, Gilchrist says municipal officials have not yet decided whether to use internet voting again in 2013. Some residents still oppose it over fears the system can be hacked.
Share Tools
House of Commons Liveblog: The CP Rail back-to-work bill (#C39) by Kady O'Malley May. 29, 2012 2:46 PM Debate kicks off this afternoon at 3pm and expected to last past midnight.
Top News Headlines
- Air Canada jet with falling debris had previous mishaps
- The airplane that had its engine shut down and was forced into an emergency landing Monday in Toronto has had two previous documented cases of mechanical damage since it started flying five years ago, according to Transport Canada. more »
- Montreal streets flooded after flash storm
- Flash flooding and popped manhole covers were reported across Montreal as heavy rain blew through the city. more »
- Canada has higher proportion of seniors than ever before
- New census data shows Canada now has a higher proportion of seniors than ever before -- a development that has crept up on society with far-reaching implications for health, finance, policy and everyday family relationships. more »
- B.C. shipwreck survivor recalls 10 days lost at sea
- A Haida fisherman, one of three stranded on a B.C. island for 10 days in May, is now talking about the shipwreck and how he and his friends survived in a driftwood shelter eating little more than seaweed and sea urchins. more »
Latest Politics News Headlines
- Fisheries Act changes questioned by former ministers
- Four former federal fisheries ministers are questioning the government's motives behind the inclusion of environmental protection changes to the Fisheries Act in the Budget Implementation Act. more »
- Robocalls may need regulating, elections chief tells MPs
- Elections Canada may recommend regulating robocalls following 1,100 complaints from the last election, the Chief Electoral Officer told MPs today. He also said the agency is reviewing voter registration rules after results in a Toronto riding were thrown out. more »
- F-35 committee probe stalled, shutting down soon?
- Opposition MPs on the public accounts committee are accusing the government of having something to hide, based on a secret Conservative motion to stop hearing witnesses on the controversial F-35 fighter jet procurement. more »
- Social media websites ignoring privacy laws, watchdog says
- Canada's privacy commissioner said today she is concerned some social media companies are disregarding privacy laws, and called for the federal government to impose stronger penalties when they are breached. more »
The National
The House
- Qc students open the door to compromise May. 28, 2012 3:37 PM This week on The House, Evan Solomon explores the ongoing student protests in Quebec. The conflict that began as a disagreement between certain student associations and the provincial government over tuition hikes seems to have morphed into something larger. Evan talks to Leo Bureau-Blouin, the president of Quebec's College Student Federation, about the ongoing dispute. Then, Quebec's Finance Minister Raymond Bachand talks about what it will take to resolve the conflict, and if an election is the only solution.
- Possible human foot sent to Conservative Party HQ
- Richard Branson suggests naked kitesurfing to premier
- 'Engine shutdown' forced Air Canada jet to land
- Evolution skeptics will soon be silenced by science: Richard Leakey
- Severe thunderstorms rock eastern Ontario
- Air Canada jet with falling debris had previous mishaps
- Canada has higher proportion of seniors than ever before
- Newly discovered malware most lethal cyberweapon to date
- Alberta couple, child found dead in Saskatchewan ditch

