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Elections Canada managing long ballot with 90 candidates challenging Poilievre

OTTAWA - Elections Canada says it has measures in place to help people vote in the Ontario riding where Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is being challenged by 90 other candidates on the ballot.

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Elections Canada managing long ballot with 90 candidates challenging Poilievre

Elections Canada signage is pictured near an advance polling station in Ottawa, on Friday, April 18, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Spencer Colby


OTTAWA - Elections Canada says it has measures in place to help people vote in the Ontario riding where Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is being challenged by 90 other candidates on the ballot.

Poilievre is in a tight race against Liberal candidate Bruce Fanjoy, who has been waging an intense ground battle in the riding.

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    1. Comment by Carrie.

      So the conservatives are sending people into this Carleton riding from as far away as Calgary to knock on doors for PPs campaign. I wonder if anyone in Carleton has even met PP as he takes advantage of their votes for his own gain? I'm thinking there's roughly 90 candidates to choose from who would do a better job. I spoke to my personal Liberal candidate for about 30 minutes the other day. She is running for the betterment of my riding, not to make a reality of a dream she's had of being PM since she was a teenager.

    2. Comment by Jennifer.

      There should be a way to prevent independents from becoming candidates as a form of protest. These people, no doubt, chuckle because they think it's a clever protest but it is also a blow against democracy. I hope we get some new laws to prevent such protests in the future. I question whether the signatures they collected to become a candidate were all valid. Each one of them needed 100 signatures.

    3. Comment by Jonathan.

      Sorry but these protest groups do more damage than anything else. All they do is confuse voters, particularly more vulnerable voters by stacking a ballot with a bunch of non-serious, nobody candidates who don't campaign or make themselves visible. Most don't live anywhere near the riding (at least one candidate is a supply teacher in Toronto) nor could most point to it on a map. Quite frankly, this should be a form of election interference. This is not engagement and turns an election into a circus. Elections Canada should tighten the rules for getting a name on a ballot.

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