Pre-election spending limits on party ads don’t apply without fixed voting day
OTTAWA — Canadian party leaders worked their way around the country this week, in what some see as a sure sign the pandemic is near its end, but also as proof that a federal election is on its way.
But with the fixed-election date still more than two years away, does a pre-election campaign that looks like a pre-election campaign and smells like a pre-election campaign, actually qualify as a pre-election campaign?
Not according to Canada’s newest election law.
The Election Modernization Act of 2018 would normally mean politicians can glad-hand — or elbow, in pandemic times — to their hearts’ content in the summer before an election. But they can only spend a limited amount on advertising. This year, that act does not apply.