Top Stories -   

1
Farhat Mirza, 25, poses with her Niqab on March 24, 2007 in Montreal. (Peter Mccabe / THE CANADIAN PRESS) In this April 22, 2010 file photo, a 22 year old woman wears the niqab as she sits in a park in Brussels. (AP / Yves Logghe) For the second time in one month, a 29-year-old woman Muslim woman from Egypt, left, has been asked to remove her veil.

Tory MP's bill would force voters to show faces

Viewer

CTV News Video

CTV National News: Roger Smith on the bill
A bill just brought forward by a Conservative Member of Parliament would mandate voters to uncover their face before being allowed to cast a ballot. The government says a law increases transparency in elections; critics say the bill is racist.

A A |  Email ThisEmail  | Print Facebook   

Farhat Mirza, 25, poses with her Niqab on March 24, 2007 in Montreal. (Peter Mccabe / THE CANADIAN PRESS) In this April 22, 2010 file photo, a 22 year old woman wears the niqab as she sits in a park in Brussels. (AP / Yves Logghe) For the second time in one month, a 29-year-old woman Muslim woman from Egypt, left, has been asked to remove her veil.

Photos

Farhat Mirza, 25, poses with her Niqab on March 24, 2007 in Montreal. (Peter Mccabe / THE CANADIAN PRESS)

View Larger Image

Date: Sun. Feb. 13 2011 6:13 PM ET

A potentially thorny bill that would force voters to show their faces when casting ballots in a federal election has been tabled in the House of Commons by a Conservative backbencher.

The Conservatives say the aim of the bill is to increase transparency in elections, but critics say the proposed legislation could ignite a nasty debate over culture, freedom of expression and religion.

Similar legislation drafted in France banned Islamic face-covering garments like the niqab in public places. Quebec has also seen public debate over the practice.

While Immigration Minister Jason Kenney called the Conservative proposal "reasonable" on CTV's Question Period on Sunday, he noted that the government does not want to tell people how to dress.

"I don't think we should be adopting the French idea of banning, telling people what they can and cannot wear," Kenney said.

"I believe in personal liberty, even if I find some expressions of personal liberty a bit peculiar. I don't think we should be regulating what people wear but when a citizen comes to deal with the government, particularly to exercise their right to vote, I think it's entirely reasonable that we say we need to confirm who you are and a facial identification is a reasonable way of doing that."

Quebec MP Steven Blaney introduced the bill on Friday, but he did not present any statistics to suggest that face coverings posed a problem for staff at Elections Canada. In fact, Elections Canada did not report a single face-covering incident during the 2008 federal election.

Blaney declined to say that his bill is inspired by Muslim face-veils. However, he did say that there have been incidents where people have showed up to vote wearing ski masks and disguises.

Still, critics in the NDP and the Liberals have said that the bill is a gambit designed to stir debate over minority rights in Quebec.

The current elections law does not compel voters to show their faces.

Share with your social Network:

Facebook DIGG Newsvine Delicious Twitter StumbeUpon Reddit Yahoo! Buzz

 

Advertisement

Contest

Today's Top Stories

Former Liberian President Charles Taylor waits for the start of his sentencing judgement in the courtroom of the Special Court for Sierra Leone in Leidschendam, near The Hague, Netherlands, Wednesday May 30, 2012.  (AP / Toussaint Kluiters)

Charles Taylor gets 50 years for 'brutal' crimes

More   2 Comments 2    1 Video(s) 1

A police officer removes a package containing a human foot from the Conservative Party headquarters in Ottawa on Tuesday, May 29, 2012. (Sean Kilpatrick / THE CANADIAN PRESS)

Police probe body parts in Ottawa, torso in Montreal

More    Comments    3 Video(s) 3

Supporters of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, hold placards and banners bearing images of him before the verdict was given in his extradition case at the Supreme Court in London, Wednesday, May 30, 2012. (AP / Matt Dunham)

Britain's top court backs extradition of WikiLeaks chief

More   4 Comments 4    2 Video(s) 2