Canada is moving ahead with this month鈥檚 federal election without the network of on-campus polling stations that it聽operated in the two previous elections, concluding that helping the sick and elderly is a bigger pandemic-era priority.
Government officials described their Vote on Campus programme as a boost to student turnout in the 2015 and 2019 elections that they expected to resume in the future, but could not implement this month amid both Covid and a snap election that gave them just five weeks to聽prepare.
鈥淲e had to make difficult choices,鈥 said a spokesman for Elections Canada, the federal agency in charge of voting processes. 鈥淲e know students face unique barriers to聽voting, and we remain committed to addressing those barriers at every opportunity.鈥
That answer was failing to satisfy more than 21,000 Canadian聽university students who demanding that the Vote on Campus programme be revived for the 20聽September nationwide聽poll.
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鈥淥ur futures depend on what government leaders do now, and we have a right to a say in who our leaders are,鈥 the protesting students say in their petition to Elections Canada.
Canada鈥檚 prime minister, Justin Trudeau, announced on 15聽August the September election date 鈥 more than twice as early as necessary following the previous election in October聽2019 鈥 in an apparent bid to take advantage of public goodwill while Covid was in retreat and the economy rebounding.
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That is now seen as backfiring on Mr Trudeau, with student anger just one potential problem. National polls have shown his Liberal party 鈥 already leading Canada without a聽majority in parliament 鈥 losing support sharply since the election announcement because of factors that include a history of corruption scandals and a sense of opportunism in his election timing.
Major issues for higher education in the election include calls for and a bigger federal role in .
The effect of the Vote on Campus programme appeared positive, especially in its first year, 2015, when 57聽per cent of eligible Canadian voters aged聽18 to聽24 cast a聽ballot, up more than 18聽percentage points from 2011 levels. Then in 2019, according to Elections Canada data, student participation in the on-campus option , from 69,000 in聽2015.
But it is聽not clear whether the programme generated substantial numbers of new voters or largely aided those already inclined to participate. That latter possibility is suggested by Elections Canada data showing that the number of voters aged聽18 to聽24 fell by 3聽percentage points from 2015 to聽2019, leaving the 2019 youth turnout those aged聽65 to聽74.
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The pandemic helped Elections Canada decide that it should prioritise helping 鈥渧ulnerable electors such as those who live in care homes and are confined to their facility鈥, the agency said.
The ultimate effect of that trade-off is difficult to assess, said Semra Sevi, a voting behaviour researcher at Columbia University who earned her doctorate at the University of Montreal.
But Dr Sevi said her past work has identified the 18-24 age group as an exception to the majority of Canadians, 鈥渨ho find it very easy to聽vote鈥.
鈥淲e know from existing research that their turnout is lower by perceived burdens,鈥 she said of younger voters. 鈥淲e really need to target this group of voters first and foremost.鈥
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