Pierre Poilievre

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Candidates face threats, doxxing, as longest ballot campaign exceeds 200 names
209 candidates have registered to run in the Aug. 18 Battle River-Crowfoot byelection

Author of the article:Bryan Passifiume
Published Jul 28, 2025 • Last updated 15 hours ago • 2 minute read

There are 209 candidates who have registered to run in the Aug. 18 Battle River-Crowfoot byelection
There are 209 candidates who have registered to run in the Aug. 18 Battle River-Crowfoot byelection. It's all part of an election reform protest by the Longest Ballot Committee. (@BryanPassifiume)
OTTAWA — With election day in Battle River-Crowfoot just weeks away, organizers of a long-running election reform protest are celebrating breaking an important milestone — but their candidates are feeling the heat.


In a statement issued Sunday evening, organizers of the Longest Ballot Committee announced the ballot for the Aug. 18 byelection — where Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is trying to win a seat — has exceeded 200 names. That total is more than double the record-tying 91-name ballot fielded in the suburban Ottawa riding of Carleton in April’s federal election — and matches the 91-name ballot fielded during last year’s byelection in LaSalle–Emard–Verdun.


That topped the previous record of 84 candidates for the 2024 Toronto-St. Paul’s byelection.

“We hope MPs hear our message loud and clear and do the right thing: recuse themselves and pass decisions on election law to an independent, permanent, non-partisan body, such as a citizens’ assembly to decide,” wrote Longest Ballot organizers Tomas and Kieran Szuchewycz.

“Elections Canada runs our elections. It is an independent, permanent, non-partisan body. The electoral boundary commissions draw riding maps — they are independent, permanent, and non-partisan bodies. We have these institutions to thank for election results we can trust, and the absence of gerrymandering in Canada.”


Ousted from his seat in Carleton on election night, Poilievre is counting on winning Battle River-Crowfoot to reclaim his spot in the House of Commons.

But those unhappy with the campaign are directing their frustration at candidates — using a leaked list of personal information to harass and threaten those on the ballot, prompting some to withdraw their candidacy.



Alex Banks, of Grande Prairie, Alta. — running as a longest ballot candidate for the fourth time — told the Toronto Sun it’s been interesting watching the anger shift.

“The biggest change I’ve noticed is the tone of opposition and where it’s coming from,” he said.

“In the two byelections, in Liberal-held ridings, there was a lot from the Truanon crowd on Twitter telling me I’m a paid Conservative shill, but it never got beyond that — it never got to people making attacks on people’s homes to intimidate them.”

Questions to the Szuchewyczs on the abuse being faced by their candidates went unreturned.


The Longest Ballot Committee was created in response to a broken election promise by former prime minister Justin Trudeau, who during his 2015 campaign, said that election would be last in Canada governed by first-past-the-post election (FPTP) rules — preferring, instead, election systems like proportional representation.

Dillon Anderson, another longest ballot candidate, who lives near Sudbury, said he agrees with the campaign’s efforts towards campaign reform.

“I agree with the core message that politicians need to recuse themselves and give the power back to Canadians when it comes to deciding election rules,” he said, noting that unlike many of his fellow candidates, he is running with an election platform.

“Canadians are realizing that people like Pierre Poilievre, Justin Trudeau, Mark Carney — they’ve all broken promises.”

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Battle River-Crowfoot byelection ballot to not have names
Voters will be provided a list of candidates, and will have to write the name of their preferred candidate on the ballot

Author of the article:Bryan Passifiume
Published Jul 29, 2025 • Last updated 18 hours ago • 1 minute read

Sample of the special ballot designed for the upcoming Battle River-Crowfoot byelection
Sample of the special ballot designed for the upcoming Battle River-Crowfoot byelection Photo by Elections Canada
OTTAWA — Efforts to create the longest ballot in Canadian history have come up short.


Unwilling to deal with the logistics of a 200-plus name ballot, Elections Canada will instead offer voters in the coming Battle River-Crowfoot byelection a ballot without any names at all — announcing Monday that voters will have to write the name of their preferred candidate on a ballot the size of bank cheque.


“Elections Canada has created an adapted ballot that is similar to a special ballot, on which electors write the name of the candidate they are voting for,” Elections Canada said in a news release.

“This adapted ballot will replace the typical list-style ballot, on which electors mark a blank circle next to the name of their candidate of choice.”

This adapted ballot, Elections Canada assures, will retain the safeguards of a typical ballot.



As of Monday, 209 candidates are on the ballot for the byelection thanks to the Longest Ballot Committee, an ongoing election reform protest formed in response to a failed election promise by former PM Justin Trudeau to do away with first-past-the-post balloting.

During April’s federal election, poll workers in the suburban Ottawa riding of Carleton had a difficult time dealing with the nearly metre-long 91-name ballot, another ballot embiggened by the committee.



The Alberta byelection was called after former Conservative MP Damien Kurek stepped aside to allow party leader Poilievre the chance to return to the House of Commons after losing his seat in Carleton on election night.

Voters will be provided a list of candidates, and are required to write the name of their preferred candidate on the ballot.

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Advance polls open in Alberta byelection with 214 candidates, historic blank ballots
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Fakiha Baig
Published Aug 08, 2025 • 2 minute read

Sample of the special ballot designed for the upcoming Battle River-Crowfoot byelection
Sample of the special ballot designed for the upcoming Battle River-Crowfoot byelection Photo by Elections Canada
CAMROSE — Advance polls in a historic federal byelection for Alberta’s Battle River-Crowfoot open today.


For the first time ever, Elections Canada says voters must fill out a blank ballot.


The agency lists a record 214 candidates running in the rural riding, with voting day on Aug. 18.

The majority are part of the Longest Ballot Committee, a protest group calling for various changes to Canada’s electoral system.

Prime Minister Mark Carney called the byelection in June after Conservative Damien Kurek, who handily won the seat in the April general election, stepped down so Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre could run.

Poilievre lost his long-held Ottawa seat of Carleton.

The byelection also features Liberal candidate Darcy Spady, the NDP’s Katherine Swampy and Independent Bonnie Critchley.

Elections Canada says there have been some exceptions to its regular ballot. Adapted ballots with two columns have been used in elections with a higher-than-usual number of candidates.


In this byelection, it’s not just marking an x. Voters must handwrite the name of their preferred candidate in a blank space.

“Their vote will be counted, even if they misspell the candidate’s name,” said agency spokesperson Matthew McKenna.

“They can also include the name of the political party. However, if they write only the name of a political party, their ballot cannot be counted. The candidate’s name has to be there.”

A list of all candidates in large-print will be at polling stations for electors to refer to, he added. The agency’s website also said magnifiers and large-grip pencils will be available.

Poll workers have been given extra training. McKenna said there are ways they can assist electors with ballots, and the counting process will be different.


Poilievre repeated his frustration Thursday with the longest ballot initiative. More than 90 candidates were on the ballot when he ran in Carleton.

“I don’t have a problem with anyone who wants to run for office, even if they’re not known or not wealthy,” he said at an unrelated news conference in Calgary.

“But that’s not what these people are doing … they just want to inundate the ballot to confuse the situation, make it harder for people to vote. People with vision problems, the elderly, others who have difficulty now will have a harder time voting.”
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Conservative campaign manager Jenni Byrne says she won’t run the next campaign
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Sarah Ritchie
Published Aug 08, 2025 • 1 minute read

OTTAWA — The Conservative party will have a new campaign manager in the next federal election, now that Jenni Byrne says she’s stepping back from the role she held this spring.


Byrne, who remains a key adviser to party leader Pierre Poilievre, also ran campaigns for former prime minister Stephen Harper in 2011 and 2015.


She has been the target of criticism since April 28, with some Conservatives calling for her to be fired after the party’s fourth straight election loss to the Liberals.

Byrne recently gave a wide-ranging interview to a podcast called Beyond a Ballot, which says its mission is to get more women interested in politics.

She says the decision not to focus the Conservative campaign on U.S. President Donald Trump and his tariffs was the right one.

Byrne says the Liberals won because Prime Minister Mark Carney “lied” about his ability to negotiate with Trump, while the Conservatives maintained the voter base that polls showed they had in January.
 
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Conservative campaign manager Jenni Byrne says she won’t run the next campaign
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Sarah Ritchie
Published Aug 08, 2025 • 1 minute read

OTTAWA — The Conservative party will have a new campaign manager in the next federal election, now that Jenni Byrne says she’s stepping back from the role she held this spring.


Byrne, who remains a key adviser to party leader Pierre Poilievre, also ran campaigns for former prime minister Stephen Harper in 2011 and 2015.


She has been the target of criticism since April 28, with some Conservatives calling for her to be fired after the party’s fourth straight election loss to the Liberals.

Byrne recently gave a wide-ranging interview to a podcast called Beyond a Ballot, which says its mission is to get more women interested in politics.

She says the decision not to focus the Conservative campaign on U.S. President Donald Trump and his tariffs was the right one.

Byrne says the Liberals won because Prime Minister Mark Carney “lied” about his ability to negotiate with Trump, while the Conservatives maintained the voter base that polls showed they had in January.
The Toronto centric media keeps claiming that it is boomers that voted the liberals in, and keep them propped up. That may be the case in Toronto, but most certainly not in the West.