The government will have to modify the Popular Consultation Act to trigger an immigration referendum

If he does indeed want to move forward with a sectoral referendum on immigration, François Legault will have no choice but to adapt the Popular Consultation Act, which is “no longer up to date,” says Élections Québec .

In recent days, the Prime Minister has put the possibility of a possible popular consultation on immigration powers back on the table. All this will depend, he says, on the results of discussions with his counterpart in Ottawa, Justin Trudeau, who has had a “deadline” imposed on him at the end of June.

However, before launching a sectoral referendum process, the CAQ government would be required to table a bill, indicated a spokesperson for the independent organization, Julie St-Arnaud Drolet, in an email exchange with The duty, Wednesday. “The Popular Consultation Act, which specifies how the Electoral Act must be adapted to the holding of a referendum, is no longer up to date. A new legal framework should therefore be established,” she wrote.

Last amended in 2001, the Popular Consultation Act establishes on paper how a referendum process will operate. It does not take into account the modifications made since to political financing or even to the functioning of voting on campuses, recalls Élections Québec.

For example, it provides that the total contributions of a voter “cannot exceed, during the same referendum […], the sum of $3,000 to each of the national committees. In comparison, since 2013, the Election Act has set the maximum annual contribution at $100, except for an election year ($200).

The current legal framework also makes no mention of a “sectoral referendum”, clarified Mr.me St-Arnaud Drolet, Tuesday. “The Law provides that the government can consult voters by referendum on a question approved by the National Assembly or on a bill,” she wrote.

On Wednesday morning, however, the Parti Québécois had already begun to outline the outlines of a Yes camp. “There is a final meeting with Justin Trudeau [le 30 juin]. I ask the Prime Minister to commit […], if for the umpteenth time the door closes in his face, to trigger this popular consultation on the repatriation of full immigration powers. In which case, I will be at his side,” said his leader, Paul St-Pierre Plamondon.

Québec solidaire does not believe it is necessary to side with one side or another, because “the Prime Minister […] does not even use all the powers to which he has access at the moment,” argued the political party on Wednesday. The Liberal Party of Quebec opposes the repatriation of all immigration powers, as requested by the Coalition Avenir Québec (CAQ).

The government has not ruled out anything so far. “It will depend on the results of the discussions,” said the Prime Minister, François Legault, on Tuesday.

A referendum and an election on the same day?

The last referendum proposed by the CAQ dates back to 2019. Minister Sonia LeBel then proposed that the reform of the voting method that her party was proposing be subject to popular consultation at the time of the 2022 election. The reform was ultimately abandoned , because “it doesn’t interest the population, apart from a few intellectuals,” François Legault ultimately argued.

As part of the consultations on the reform project, however, the Director General of Elections of Quebec (DGEQ) encouraged Quebec to reopen the Popular Consultation Act.

“This law excludes the possibility of holding a referendum at the same time as an electoral event,” he wrote in his memorandum submitted to parliamentarians. “It also provides that the elected representatives of the National Assembly constitute the referendum camps. Since the referendum on the voting method would be held at the same time as a general election, adaptations had to be made to the Act. »

Since its founding in 1945, the DGEQ has administered three referendum campaigns: that on the Charlottetown Accord in 1992, as well as the two campaigns on Quebec sovereignty.

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