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Federal Liberal leadership race rules undemocratic, unethical
Set out below is a letter-to-the-editor by Democracy Watch Coordinator Tyler Sommers which was published in the the Hill Times on September 17, 2012
The federal Liberals had an opportunity to set ethical, democratic rules for their party leadership race, but have failed to do so.
The $75,000 entry fee is much too high, and candidates should have been allowed to qualify through gathering signatures of support, not just by paying an exorbitant fee.
Candidates who are not MPs are not required by law to disclose all donations they receive because of loopholes — so the Party should be requiring this disclosure.
Candidates are also not required by law to disclose support they receive through volunteer labour because of loopholes — so the Party should also be requiring this disclosure so that anyone who does a favour for any candidate will be known and future conflicts of interest can be prevented.
Loans to candidates by themselves should have prohibited, and the amount of any loan should have been limited to the same level donations are limited ($1,300).
And people casting a ballot should have been allowed to vote “none-of-the-above” if they don’t like any of the candidates.
It is dangerous to allow political parties who are choosing a potential Prime Minister to set whatever rules they want for their leadership race — the above rules should be added to the Canada Elections Act, and Elections Canada given full powers to oversee leadership races.
For more details, go to Democracy Watch’s Voter Rights Campaign page
In celebration of International Democracy Day (Sept. 15th), Democracy Watch launches new, interactive website that invites all Canadians to “Become a Democracy Watcher”
NEWS RELEASE
In celebration of International Democracy Day (Sept. 15th), Democracy Watch launches new, interactive website that invites all Canadians to “Become a Democracy Watcher”
Friday, September 14, 2012
OTTAWA – Today, to celebrate International Democracy Day (Sept. 15), Democracy Watch launched its new website. Same great key information, but much easier for Canadians to find what they want and to join in with the more than 18,000 people and 120 organizations across Canada that support Democracy Watch’s successful, leading campaigns to clean up Canadian governments and businesses, and to make Canada the world’s leading democracy.
Viewers of the site can now send letters to key politicians across Canada with one click calling for key changes to require everyone in politics in Canada to be honest, ethical, open, representative and waste-preventing, and to require Canada’s big businesses and big banks to serve everyone fairly and well at fair prices, and to act responsibly.
Viewers can also Become a Democracy Watcher and help win these key changes in other ways — organize an event (including a CoffeeParty.ca event), lobby a politician to sign the Good Government Pledge, do research, and of course donate to help Democracy Watch’s winning campaigns keep on winning.
Democracy Watch has won a lot of key changes for Canadians in the past 19 years – more than 110 changes to federal and provincial laws that have required Canadian politicians and governments and big businesses to be more honest, open, ethical, representative, waste-preventing and responsible, and accountable. In fact, Democracy Watch has won more changes than any other Canadian citizen group since 1993.
Canadians know who is lobbying and donating to which politicians (and donations are limited and only individuals can donate) because of changes Democracy Watch and the coalitions it coordinates have won, and ethics rules for politicians, bureaucrats and lobbyists are stronger, and better enforced, than in the past because of Democracy Watch’s campaigns, and Canada’s banks are required to serve people better, and all big businesses required to act more responsibly, because of changes Democracy Watch’s campaigns have won.
But more changes are needed – the Lobbying Act, Canada Elections Act, Conflict of Interest Act and MP and senator ethics codes, Access to Information Act, Public Servants Disclosure Protection Act and federal corporate responsibility laws are all being reviewed over the next several months by federal politicians. As it has for the past 19 years, Democracy Watch is leading the campaigns for key changes to strengthen all of these laws to make everyone in federal politics more democratic and accountable, and all big businesses more responsible and accountable.
Democracy Watch’s eight campaigns are aimed at making Canada the world’s leading democracy by stopping election fraud, government waste, patronage and cronyism in Cabinet appointments, gouging by big businesses, secret, unethical deals that help big businesses and hurt everyone else, secret lobbying, secret donations and excessive government secrecy, and creating effective systems to protect whistleblowers who report government and big business wrongdoing.
– 30 –
FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT:
Tyler Sommers, Coordinator of Democracy Watch
Tel: 613-241-5179
Email: [email protected]
Internet: https://democracywatch.ca
Avro Arrow lobbying exposes loopholes in Lobbying Act allowing lobbying without registration CBC.ca
Federal Liberal leadership race rules undemocratic, unethical
Set out below is a letter-to-the-editor by Democracy Watch Coordinator Tyler Sommers which was published in the Huffington Post on September 9, 2012
The Liberal Party of Canada recently revealed the rules governing their next party leadership election.Despite having an opportunity to set ethical and democratic rules for this race to ensure that it is not tarnished, as past races have been, by unethical, secretive, unfair, and unrepresentative actions by candidates and officials, the party failed to go far enough in doing so.
To uphold the democratic principles of one person, one vote, and of honesty, openness, ethics and fair and accurate representation, the Liberal Party should have made decisions to eliminate or drastically limit the entry fee and require the disclosure of key information regarding the race.
Setting the entry fee at $75,000 poses an undue hurdle for many potential candidates and should have been replaced through allowing candidates to qualify by gathering signatures and support, not by buying their way into the race.
In law, because of loopholes, candidates for leadership are not required to disclose all of the donations they receive nor are they required to disclose the support they receive through volunteer labour. The party could have remedied this and in doing so established a much more open, transparent, and democratic leadership election through requiring the disclosure of all donations and requiring disclosure so that anyone who does a favour for a candidate will be known and potential conflicts of interest could be avoided.
Learning from past leadership races and the incredible amount of debt that candidates have taken on loans to candidates by themselves should have been prohibited, and the amount of any loan should have been limited to the same level that donations are limited ($1,300).
To ensure that every voter can cast a ballot and exercise their democratic right of voting for whom they want everyone should be given the option of voting “none-of-the-above” if they don’t like any of the candidates.
These changes should be instituted by all parties and added to the Elections Act, as promised by the federal Conservatives in 2006, to ensure that political parties choosing a potential Prime Minister operate democratically. Unfortunately the Liberal party has missed out on an opportunity to establish a strong and democratic precedent for future leadership elections not only within their party, but for all federal and provincial political parties.
For more details, go to Democracy Watch’s Voter Rights Campaign page
Ontarians should not be surprised at low voter turnout in provincial by-elections — Changes needed to election timing, voting system, and voter rights and advertising to increase voter turnout in by-elections and general elections
News Release
Ontarians should not be surprised at low voter turnout in provincial by-elections
Changes needed to election timing, voting system, and voter rights and advertising to increase voter turnout in by-elections and general elections
Friday, September 7, 2012
OTTAWA – Today Democracy Watch called for democratic changes to Ontario’s election system in response to low voter turnout in the recent provincial by-elections. Changes to educating Ontarians about their democratic rights, election dates, and ensuring honesty in politics would have led to higher voter turnout.
“Given that only 48.2% of eligible voters cast their ballots in the last provincial election, the lowest percentage in Ontario history, and we’re looking at approximately 26% turnout for Vaughan and 47% turnout for Waterloo in these by-elections, major changes are clearly needed to counter this threat to the provincial government’s democratic legitimacy.” Said Tyler Sommers, Coordinator of Democracy Watch. “Unfortunately Elections Ontario and the Government of Ontario have failed to change anything so far, and Premier McGuinty chose dates for the by-elections when many people were on holiday, helping their children get ready for school, or moving for college or university, all of which likely hurt voter turnout.”
In addition to Elections Ontario properly educating voters about their right to decline the ballot (and disclosing declined ballot totals in election results), and the government changing the fixed election date to late October-early November (as with municipal elections), the provincial Election Act must also be changed to prohibit holding by-elections during the summer months and holiday periods, and at times when post-secondary students are moving, to ensure many voters are not essentially prevented from voting.
In addition, the most important changes the Ontario parties can make to increase voter turnout are as follows:
- pass an honesty-in-politics law that gives voters an easy, low-cost way to file complaints to the Integrity Commissioner, and gives the Commissioner the power to penalize misleaders (and requires MPPs who switch parties in-between elections to resign and run in a by-election);
- change the voting system so that the percentage of MPPs each party receives more closely matches the popular vote percentages.
These changes would give voters a reason to vote because they would know that voting for a specific party would mean a guaranteed result in terms of percentage of MPPs elected and promises kept.
In addition, if the parties strengthen provincial ethics, political finance, lobbying, open government, and whistleblower protection laws, voters will have more reason to vote because they would be more assured of good government no matter which party won.
“In addition to election dates often making it difficult for people to pay full attention to campaigns and get to the polls on election day, Canadians know from experience that they are not going to get what they vote for, and are likely to get dishonest, secretive, unethical, unrepresentative and wasteful government no matter who they vote for, and as a result no one should be surprised to see voter turnout dropping lower and lower,” said Sommers.
These problems exist in all the provinces and territories across Canada. All of these changes should be made by the federal and provincial and territorial governments, and for their municipalities, before either mandatory or Internet voting are tried (because both of those changes will likely have serious negative effects).
– 30 –
FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT:
Tyler Sommers, Coordinator of Democracy Watch
Tel: (613) 241-5179
[email protected]
Democracy Watch’s Voter’s Rights Campaign
Democracy Watch reminds us what democracy means
NDP’s ad scheme shows need for audits, rulings disclosure by Elections Canada
Set out below is a letter-to-the-editor by Democracy Watch Coordinator Tyler Sommers which was published in the the Hill Times on September 3, 2012
The clear need for Elections Canada to be given the power, and mandate, to audit federal political parties’ and riding associations annually, and to disclose all of its rulings and reports publicly, has been shown yet again by the fact that a media outlet (the Toronto Star) obtained secret documents recently that revealed that Elections Canada made a deal with the federal NDP to have it return more than $340,000 to various unions and other organizations that had paid the NDP excessively high amounts for advertising at conventions since 2006.
The NDP’s ad scheme should have been revealed by Elections Canada through an audit in 2006, and the deal Elections Canada made with the NDP should have been made public by Elections Canada as soon as the deal was completed.
Who knows how many other questionable schemes parties and riding associations have been involved in that have escaped anyone’s attention because Elections Canada does not do audits.
Elections Canada continues to hide how it has resolved almost 3,000 complaints received during elections since 1997, and has never even disclosed how many complaints it has received in between elections since 1997. See details at: this news release
Democracy Watch filed an access-to-information request last April for every ruling Elections Canada has made since 1997, and is still waiting for a full response while Elections Canada continues to make excuses for the delay.
For more details, go to Democracy Watch’s Voter Rights Campaign page
Re: Coalition Avenir Québec receives D+ best grade of bad overall grades in Report Card on Québec Parties’ Democratic Good Government Platforms — Parti Québecois receive a D, Québec solidaire an F and Liberals an Incomplete
Coalition Avenir Québec receives D+ best grade of bad overall grades in Report Card on Québec Parties’ Democratic Good Government Platforms — Parti Québecois receive a D, Québec solidaire an F and Liberals an Incomplete
News Release Coalition Avenir Québec receives D+ best grade of bad overall grades in Report Card on Québec Parties’ Democratic Good Government Platforms — Parti Québecois receive a D, Québec solidaire an F and Liberals an Incomplete Despite high voter concern about democracy and trust, all parties fail to promise many needed changes to have effective democracy, government ethics and accountability in Québec OTTAWA – Today, Democracy Watch released its Report Card on the 2012 Democratic Good Government Election Platforms of the four main Québec political parties, the only election report card on these issues. The Coalition Avenir Québec receives a D+ best grade of bad overall grades in the Report Card — the Parti Québecois received a D, Québec solidaire an F and the Liberals an Incomplete. A Dishonesty Downgrade of one full grade is also shown in the Report Card results because history has shown across Canada that usually only half of all promises are kept because of the lack of an honesty-in-politics law which is needed to effectively penalize promise-breakers and misleaders. The grades are so low because none of the parties have promised to make enough specific changes to effectively stop: dishonesty in politics; politicians, their staff and government officials from making decisions in which they have personal interests; secret, unlimited donations (especially to party leadership and nomination candidates); secret lobbying; excessive secrecy in government; unrepresentative decision-making, and; waste. The Coalition Avenir Québec received the best grade in three of the five categories of the Report Card (Honest, ethical government measures; Open government measures, and General government accountability measures). The Parti Québecois tied with the CAQ for best score in one category — measures to prevent waste. Québec solidaire had the best overall score in the category of measures to ensure representative, citizen-driven government. “All the Québec parties have failed to respond enough to high voter concern about democracy and trust issues,” said Tyler Sommers, Coordinator of Democracy Watch and its five national good government coalitions. “The rules and enforcement to stop illegal parking in Québec are stronger, and the penalties higher, than the rules and enforcement for stopping political corruption. The rules are so full of loopholes that they are like a yellow light that only warns people in Québec politics not to be unethical, instead of a red light that clearly tells them to stop what they are doing.” “The party leaders should not be surprised by the lack of support they will receive from voters on election day. One can only hope that the parties will actually address these concerns when the legislature opens again so that everyone in Québec politics will, finally after 145 years, be effectively required to act honestly, ethically, openly, representatively and to prevent waste,” said Sommers. “Undemocratic, bad government rules and processes usually produce bad decisions that fail to solve key problems in society, and so as long as provincial politicians fail to clean up the government, they will likely also continue to fail to clean up many other problems in Québec,” said Sommers. “Given the lack of a provincial honesty-in-politics law, and the lack of a clear pledge by any of the parties to pass such a law, voters should be wary of trusting any political promises,” said Sommers. The Report Card grades the four main parties’ platform pledges based upon 16 sets of key changes in five areas that Democracy Watch and its coalitions believe are the cin and hanges that will most effectively require everyone in the Québec government to act honestly, ethically, openly, efficiently, representatively and, if they don’t act in these democratic ways, easily and thoroughly held accountable. In total, the 16 sets of changes add up to 100 key changes needed to the Québec government’s democracy, ethics and accountability system. The measures are a compilation of the proposals of the five nation-wide coalitions Democracy Watch coordinates (Government Ethics Coalition, Money in Politics Coalition, Open Government Coalition, Corporate Responsibility Coalition, Canadian Community Reinvestment Coalition). A combined total of more than 140 citizen groups with a total membership of more than 3 million Canadians belong to the coalitions, groups that work on anti-poverty, bank accountability, community economic development, consumer, corporate responsibility, environment, labour, social justice, women and youth issues. Many national surveys over the past several years have shown that a large majority of Canadians support the 100 democracy, ethics and government accountability reforms set out in the Report Card, as do many commentators on democratic reform. The federal government, and every province and territory and municipality across Canada, all have a similar list of 100 loopholes and flaws in their government systems (each with a slightly differect set of loopholes and flaws, depending on which have been closed or corrected in the past). The 16 sets of changes, divided into five areas, all reflect the following five key elements for ensuring that large, powerful government institutions act responsibly and follow rules: 1. strong laws with no loopholes; 2. requirement to disclose details of operations and violations; 3. fully independent, fully empowered watchdog agencies to enforce laws; 4. penalties that are high enough to encourage compliance; and 5. empowerment of citizens to hold governments and watchdog agencies accountable. The parties were given a grade ranging from A (Platform makes clear promise to implement proposal) to I (Platform does not mention proposal), with grades B for a vague or partial promise to implement the proposal, C and D for clear to vague promises to explore the proposal, E for mentioning proposal and F for mentioning the theme of the proposal. Grades were averaged for each of the five sections, and the averages of section grades were used to calculate the overall grade for each party. Democracy Watch graded the parties’ election platforms by reviewing the platforms. Statements by party leaders or representatives were not taken into account as they are not fully accessible to all voters, nor are they binding in any way on the party (as admitted by many party leaders) and as a result are even less reliable than promises made in the parties’ platforms. – 30 – FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT: Coalition Avenir Québec English platform webpage (Fr) |
Report Card on the 2012 Good Government GRADING SYSTEM Coalition Avenir Québec English platform webpage (Fr) |
OVERALL REPORT CARD GRADES
best to worst
Party |
Grades |
Dishonesty Downgrade* |
Coalition Avenir Québec |
D+ |
E+ |
Liberal Party |
I |
inexcusable |
Parti Québecois |
D |
E |
Québec solidaire |
F |
I |
* Dishonesty Downgrade applied because past performance of political parties across Canada shows that they usually break half their election promises, and the lack of a provincial honesty-in-politics law means they can’t be held accountable for breaking promises.
II. Open Government Measures
5. Strengthening access-to-information system
6. Exposing behind-closed-door communications
7. Strengthening lobbying disclosure and ethics, and the enforcement system
III. Efficient Government Measures
8. Increasing powers of Auditor General
9. Restricting government and campaign advertising
IV. Representative, Citizen-Driven Government Measures
10. Increasing meaningful public consultation
11. Restricting power of Cabinet to make appointments
12. Making the legislature democratic
13. Ensuring free, fair and representative elections
V. General Government Accountability Measures
14. Facilitating citizen watchdog groups over government
15. Ensuring effective whistleblower protection
16. Ensuring loophole free laws and strong penalties for wrongdoers
I. Honest, Ethical Government Measures
SECTION I OVERALL GRADES 1. Requiring honesty-in-politics – Pass a law that requires all Cabinet ministers, MNAs, political staff, Cabinet appointees and government employees (including at Crown corporations, agencies, boards, commissions, courts and tribunals) nomination race and election candidates to tell the truth, with an easily accessible complaint process to a fully independent watchdog agency that is fully empowered to investigate and penalize anyone who lies. (Go to Honesty in Politics Campaign for details about Democracy Watch’s proposals) Coalition Avenir Québec – B- Liberal Party of Quebec – I Parti Québecois – C Québec solidaire – I 2. Strengthening ethics standards for politicians, political staff, Cabinet appointees and government employees, and ethics enforcement – Close the loopholes in the existing ethics rules (including defining “private interest” and acceptable gifts and benefits in the Code of Ethics and Conduct, and lowering the disclosure threshold for all other income, assets and liabilities in the Code down to $1,000 (to match the political donation limit) and applying it to all politicians, senior staff and senior government officials, and usually requiring divestment of assets that cause conflicts (instead of so-called “blind trusts”, and including requiring resignation and a by-election if an MNA switches parties between elections) and apply them to all government institutions (including all Crown corporations), and as proposed by the federal Department of Finance place anyone with decision-making power on the anti-corruption watch list of the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada (Fintrac) so deposits to their bank accounts can be tracked, and; strengthen the independence and effectiveness of the ethics watchdog by giving opposition party leaders a veto over appointees, having the legislature (as opposed to Cabinet) approve their annual budgets, prohibiting the watchdogs from giving secret advice, requiring them to investigate and rule publicly on all complaints (including anonymous complaints and complaints from the public), fully empowering and requiring them to penalize rule-breakers, changing all the codes they enforce into laws, and ensuring that all their decisions can be reviewed by the courts. (Go to Government Ethics Campaign for details about Democracy Watch’s proposals) Coalition Avenir Québec – C Liberal Party of Quebec – I Parti Québecois – B- Québec solidaire – F 3. Making the political donations system democratic and ethical – Prohibit secret, unlimited donations of money, property or services by anyone for any reason to nomination and party leadership candidates (such donations are now only prohibited if given to election candidates); decrease the donation limit to about $200 annually (which is the amount that an average person can afford) and decrease any tax credit for larger donations; limit loans, including from financial institutions, to parties and all types of candidates to the same level as donations are limited; require disclosure of all donations (including the identity of the donor’s employer (as in the U.S.) and/or major affiliations) and loans quarterly and before any election day; require disclosure of donations to party leadership and nomination race contestants; limit spending on campaigns for the leadership of political parties; maintain limits on third-party (non-political party) advertising during elections; lower the annual per-vote public funding of political parties that elect more MNAs than they deserve based on the percentage of voter support they receive (to balance out the total amount of funding (the annual allowance plus MNA budgets) that each party receives based on actual popular support) and; ensure riding associations receive a fair share of this per-vote funding (so that party headquarters don’t have undue control over riding associations). (Go to Money in Politics Campaign for details about Democracy Watch’s proposals) Coalition Avenir Québec – B- Liberal Party of Quebec – I Parti Québecois – B-
Québec solidaire – F 4. Closing down the revolving door – Prohibit lobbyists from working for government departments or serving in senior positions for political parties or candidates for public office (as in New Mexico and Maryland), and from having business connections with anyone who does, and close the loopholes so that the actual cooling-off period for former Cabinet ministers, ministerial staff and senior public officials is increased to 5 years (and 1-3 years for MNAs, their staff, and government employees, depending on their decision-making power) during which they are prohibited from becoming a lobbyist or working with people, corporations or organizations with which they had direct dealings while in government. Make the ethics watchdog agencies more independent and effective by by giving opposition party leaders a veto over their appointment, by prohibiting the Commissioners from giving secret advice, by requiring the Commissioners to investigate and rule publicly on all complaints (including anonymous complaints), and by fully empowering and requiring the Commissioners to penalize rule-breakers (as opposed to having the National Assembly decide penalties), and dwatchby ensuring all decisions of the Commissioners can be reviewed by the courts. (Go to Government Ethics Campaign for details about Democracy Watch’s proposals) Coalition Avenir Québec – C- Liberal Party of Quebec – I Parti Québecois – D Québec solidaire – I II. Open Government Measures SECTION II OVERALL GRADES 5. Strengthening access-to-information system – Strengthen the access-to-information law and government information management system by applying the law to all government/publicly funded institutions, requiring all institutions and officials to create records of all decisions and actions and disclose them proactively and regularly, creating a public interest override of all access exemptions, giving opposition party leaders a veto over the appointment of the Commission, having the legislature (as opposed to Cabinet) approve the Commission’s annual budgets, giving the Commission the power and mandate to order changes to government institutions’ information systems, and to penalize violators of access laws, regulations, policies and rules, and removing the power of the government (under s. 145) to delay release of information after the Commission has ordered disclosure of the information. (Go to Open Government Campaign and Stop Muzzling Scientists Campaign for details about Democracy Watch’s proposals) Coalition Avenir Québec – B Liberal Party of Quebec – I Parti Québecois – B- Québec solidaire – I 6. Exposing behind-closed-door communications – Require in a new law that Ministers and public officials and MNAs and their staff disclose their contacts with all lobbyists, whether paid or volunteer lobbyists. (Go to Government Ethics Campaign for details about Democracy Watch’s proposals) Coalition Avenir Québec – C Liberal Party of Quebec – I Parti Québecois – C Québec solidaire – I Coalition Avenir Québec – B- Liberal Party of Quebec – I Parti Québecois – C Québec solidaire – F III. Efficient Government Measures SECTION III OVERALL GRADES 8. Increasing powers of Auditor General – Increase the independence of the Auditor General by requiring approval of appointment from opposition party leaders; increase auditing resources of the Auditor General by having the legislature (as opposed to Cabinet) approve the Auditor General’s annual budget, and; empower and require the Auditor General to audit all government institutions (including the expenses of members of the legislature) and also audit projected spending (like the federal Parliamentary Budget Officer does), to make orders for changes to government institutions’ spending systems, and empower the Auditor General to penalize violators of spending rules or Auditor General orders or requests for information. (Go to Stop Fraud Politician Spending for details about Democracy Watch’s proposals) Coalition Avenir Québec – B Liberal Party of Quebec – I Parti Québecois – B- – « Un gouvernement souverainiste :
– « Créera une commission d’enquête publique et indépendante sur les pratiques de corruption et de collusion, notamment dans l’industrie de la construction, quant à l’octroi des contrats publics, des permis, des subventions et sur le financement des partis politiques. À la suite des recommandations de la commission, il révisera immédiatement, le cas échéant, toute la mécanique d’attribution, les règles d’éthique et le processus d’octroi des contrats publics, des permis, des subventions ou autres; » 9. Restricting government and campaign advertising – Empower a government watchdog agency to preview and prohibit government advertising contracting out if there is no reason to have the advertising developed by a contractor, and to restrict all advertising by the government and opposition parties and third parties in the six-month period leading up to an election. (Go to Stop Fraud Politician Spending for details about Democracy Watch’s proposals) Coalition Avenir Québec – E Liberal Party of Quebec – I Parti Québecois – E Québec solidaire – F Top of Report Card Background Details Democracy Watch homepage IV. Representative, Citizen-Driven Government Measures SECTION IV OVERALL GRADES 10. Increasing meaningful public consultation – Pass a law requiring all government departments and institutions to use consultation processes that provide meaningful opportunities for citizen participation, especially concerning decisions that affect the lives of everyone in Québec. (Go to Democratic Voting Systems Campaign for details about Democracy Watch’s proposals) Coalition Avenir Québec – I Liberal Party of Quebec – I Parti Québecois – F – “Aspirant à la liberté politique, le Parti Québécois a pour objectif premier de réaliser la souveraineté du Québec à la suite d’une consultation de la population par référendum tenu au moment jugé approprié par le gouvernement.” 11. Restricting power of Cabinet to make appointments – Require approval by opposition party leaders for the approximately 2,000 judicial, agency, board, commission and tribunal appointments currently made by the Premier, especially for appointees to senior and law enforcement positions, after a merit-based nomination and screening process. (Go to Democratic Voting Systems Campaign for details about Democracy Watch’s proposals) Coalition Avenir Québec – E Liberal Party of Quebec – I Parti Québecois – E Québec solidaire – I 12. Making the legislature more democratic – Change the law to restrict the Premier’s power to shut down (prorogue) the legislature to only for a very short time, and only for an election (dissolution) or if the national situation has changed significantly or if the Premier can show that the government has completed all their pledged actions from the last Speech from the Throne (or attempted to do so, as the opposition parties may stop or delay completion of some actions). Give all party caucuses the power to choose which MNAs and in their party sit on which legislature committees, and allow any MNA to introduce a private member bill at any time, and define what a “vote of confidence” is in the law in a restrictive way so most votes in the legislature are free votes. (Go to Democratic Voting Systems Campaign and Stop Muzzling MPs Campaign for details about Democracy Watch’s proposals) Coalition Avenir Québec – I Liberal Party of Quebec – I Parti Québecois – I Québec solidaire – I 13. Ensuring free, fair and representative elections – Change the current voting law and system (the Election Act) to specifically restrict the Premier’s power to call an unfair snap election, so that election dates are fixed as much as possible under the parliamentary system. Change the Act also so that nomination and party leadership races are regulated by Elections Québec (including limiting spending on campaigns for party leadership), so that Elections Québec determines which parties can participate in election debates based upon merit criteria, so that party leaders cannot appoint candidates except when a riding does not have a riding association, so that voters can decline their ballot (ie. vote for “none of the above”) and so Elections Québec is required to register voters and do more to maintain an accurate list of eligible voters, and to provide a more equal number of voters in every riding, and a more accurate representation in the legislature of the actual voter support for each political party (with a safeguard to ensure that a party with low-level, narrow-base support does not have a disproportionately high level of power in the legislature). (Go to Democratic Voting Systems Campaign and Stop Fraud Robocalls Campaign for details about Democracy Watch’s proposals) Coalition Avenir Québec – C- Liberal Party of Quebec – I Parti Québecois – C Québec solidaire – B V. General Government Accountability Measures SECTION V OVERALL GRADES 14. Facilitating citizen watchdog groups over government – Require provincial government institutions to enclose one-page pamphlets periodically in their mailings to citizens inviting citizens to join citizen-funded and directed groups to represent citizen interests in policy-making and enforcement processes of key government departments (for example, on ethics, spending, and health care) as has been proposed in the U.S. and recommended for Canadian banks and other financial institutions in 1998 by a federal task force, a legislature of Commons Committee, and a Senate Committee. (Go to Citizen Association Campaign for details about Democracy Watch’s proposals) Coalition Avenir Québec – F Liberal Party of Quebec – I Parti Québecois – I Québec solidaire – I 15. Ensuring effective whistleblower protection – Require everyone to report any violation of any law, regulation, policy, code, guideline or rule, and require all watchdog agencies over government (for example: Auditor General, Information and Privacy Commission, Ethics Commissioner) to investigate and rule publicly on allegations of violations, to penalize violators, to protect anyone (not just employees) who reports a violation (so-called “whistleblowers”) from retaliation, to reward whistleblowers whose allegations are proven to be true, and to ensure a right to appeal to the courts. (Go to Open Government Campaign for details about Democracy Watch’s proposals) Coalition Avenir Québec – B+ Liberal Party of Quebec – I Parti Québecois – E Québec solidaire – I 16. Ensuring loophole free laws and strong penalties for wrongdoers – Close any technical and other loopholes that have been identified in laws, regulations, policies, codes, guidelines and rules (especially those regulating government institutions and large corporations) to help ensure strong enforcement, and increase financial penalties for violations to a level that significantly effects the annual revenues/budget of the institution or corporation. (Go to Democracy Watch’s Campaigns for details about Democracy Watch’s proposals) Coalition Avenir Québec – F Liberal Party of Quebec – C Parti Québecois – D Québec solidaire – F |