Welcome to the CHF Canada Federal Election Make sure you’re registered to vote Make your vote count. Who is entitled to vote? You are entitled to vote in federal elections and referendums if you are a Canadian citizen, and will be 18 or older on polling day. See also section 3 of the Canada Elections Act. Am I registered to vote? The vast majority of electors are registered in the National Register of Electors, which is used to produce the preliminary voters lists for federal elections, by-elections and referendums. If you voted in the last general election, you may be registered to vote at the address where you lived at that time. Elections Canada updates the Register from a number of sources, so if you have moved since then, your address change may also have been registered. If you are not registered on the voters list, or you have not received a voter information card from Elections Canada showing the address of your polling station, you can get the address by telephoning the Elections Canada office in your electoral district. To find your electoral district, visit the Elections Canada Web site at www.elections.ca. You could also check the address on a voter information card received by another elector in your household. Registering at an advance or ordinary poll To have your name added to the voters list at either an advance or ordinary poll, you must register with the deputy returning officer. Once you sign the Registration Certificate that the deputy returning officer completes for you, and you show satisfactory proof of your identity and address, you can then vote. Electors can prove their identity and address in one of three ways:
At an ordinary poll, you may also register with a registration officer. If you register with a registration officer, one representative of each candidate in the electoral district is entitled to be present. Registration officers are appointed by the returning officer on the recommendation of the candidates of the registered political parties that finished first and second in the electoral district in the previous election. Acceptable types of identification It is estimated that some 85 percent of eligible voters have driver's licences issued by their province or territory that contain a photo and the name and address1 of the holder. Other electors will be required to present two authorized pieces of identification – one showing their name, and the other showing both their name and address. For example, while electors may choose to use a Canadian passport, a provincial health card or a birth certificate as proof of name, a utility bill or a bank statement are examples of documents that can be used as proof of address. The list of identification and documents that have been authorized by the Chief Electoral Officer can be found on Elections Canada's Web site at www.elections.ca. If I have any questions about voting, who do I contact? Contact Elections Canada by visiting www.elections.ca or call toll-free 1-800-463-6868. For people who are deaf or hard of hearing, call toll-free at TTY 1-800-361-8935. Let your candidates know: Co-op housing can help.
|
|