Chief electoral officer decides to stick with voting day amid religious concerns
OTTAWA — Voters will go to the polls on Oct. 21 as originally planned after Canada’s chief electoral officer decided not to reschedule voting day even though it falls on a Jewish holiday.
Election day can be no later than Oct. 21 under federal law, which this year coincides with the holiday known as Shemini Atzeret, a day on which Orthodox Jews are not permitted to work, vote or campaign.
Elections Canada had been lobbied to change the date, but decided against it this close to an election, prompting a Federal Court challenge to the decision.
Last week, the court ordered chief electoral officer Stephane Perrault to take a second look at the decision and balance the infringement on the charter rights of affected voters against the objectives of the election law.