Voting Rights in Canada Learning Tool

SECTION 7: 1960s Onwards and Modern Voting In 1969, Quebec removed the final race-based restriction to voting in Canada when Status Indians won the right to vote in provincial elections. Though race and gender-based restrictions were now eliminated in Canada, barriers to voting remained for many people. Through the second half of the 20th century and into the 21st century, laws and policies have been made or amended to increase access to voting. • Language barriers: In 1969, the Official Languages Act required that all materials and information relating to federal elections must be available in both French and English. However, this does not accommodate for language minorities or Indigenous peoples. • Age: The age requirement for voting in federal elections was 21 until it was lowered to 18 in 1970, which added nearly two million Canadians to the electoral roll. • Physical access to voting: In the 1960s, access to voting increased for remote Inuit communities (see page 13). In 1992, Bill C-78 mandated that voting and the electoral process must be made accessible to people with disabilities. • Methods of voting: Changes to how people could cast their ballot made voting more accessible. Mail-in ballots, mobile polling stations, and advance polling stations make the voting process easier for many. Special ballots allow for electors who are overseas during the election and those hospitalized or incarcerated to still have access to voting. Federal Elections Voter Information Card (courtesy Dreamstime/Photopal604/63896418). Answering students’ questions after giving a speech at York Mills Collegiate, Opposition Leader Robert Stanfield sits with high school students. April 1970 (Doug Griffin/Getty Images). The 1982 Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms affirmed the right of every Canadian citizen 18 and older to vote and stand as a candidate in elections. Groups who were disenfranchised won the vote through Charter challenges; they include federal judges, ex-patriots living abroad, prisoners, and Canadians with intellectual disabilities. Read more about these Charter challenge successes in Chapter 4 of Elections Canada’s A History of the Vote in Canada. 15.

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