Voting Rights in Canada Learning Tool

SECTION 5: Voting and the World Wars The First World War and Second World War were significant events in Canadian history and catalysts for changes in voting rights – both the removal and granting of the franchise. First World War The war brought a fear of immigrants and their descendants who were from countries that Canada was at war with. Through the Wartime Elections Act, voting rights were taken away from these “enemy aliens.” During the First World War, this included immigrants from the German, Austro-Hungarian, and Ottoman empires, and Bulgaria. Support for the war also impacted voting rights. Religious groups with pacifist ideologies, such as Mennonites and Doukhobors, also had their right to vote removed under the act. The First World War disrupted the women’s suffrage campaign and divided activists, but the Military Voters Act of 1917 gave the first women in Canada the federal vote – those who were serving in the military. That same year, the Wartime Elections Act gave female relatives of men in the military the vote. Some provinces began granting the provincial vote in 1916, but full provincial and territorial suffrage for women was not achieved until 1969. Federally, many women won the vote in 1918. In both cases the franchise was restricted by race, meaning that not all women won the vote at the same time. The participation of disenfranchised groups in the war helped some of them win the vote. In 1924, Status Indian veterans of the war won the federal vote, without having to give up status or treaty rights. In BC, Japanese-Canadian veterans won the provincial vote in 1931. SecondWorldWar During the Second World War, the Canadian government forcibly removed around 21,000 Japanese Canadians from their homes in coastal British Columbia. (Learn more about the Internment of Japanese Canadians on The Canadian Encyclopedia.) In 1944, amendments to the Dominion Elections Act withdrew the right to vote from Japanese Canadians who had been forcibly removed from BC, even if they lived in provinces where they otherwise would have had the vote. This included Japanese-Canadian veterans of the First World War, who had won the vote in British Columbia in 1931. For some groups, participation in the war led to the vote. In 1944, Status Indian veterans of the Second World War, and their spouses, were able to vote in federal elections without losing status, although some conditions persisted.1 The involvement of Chinese Canadians during the war helped pave the way for the 1947 Canadian Citizenship Act and the repeal of the Chinese Immigration Act, through which Chinese Canadians were able to gain full citizenship rights. Finally, changes to the Dominion Elections Act in 1948 gave the right to vote in federal elections to Chinese, Japanese, and South Asian Canadians. 1 www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/timeline/voting-rights-in-canada Elders and [Indigenous] soldiers in the uniform of the Canadian Expeditionary Force, ca. 1916-17 (courtesy Library and Archives Canada/PA-041366). Canadians voting in the Field for the British Columbia elections. France, September 1916 (courtesy W.I. Castle/Canada. Dept. of National Defence/Library and Archives Canada/PA-000554). 10.

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