June 28th, 2024

Votes in Toronto byelection counting very slowly, Liberals narrowly ahead of Tories

By The Canadian Press on June 24, 2024.

Toronto—St Paul's residents will head to the polls today to vote for a new member of parliament to represent their riding, which the Liberals have won in the last 10 elections. Liberal Party candidate Leslie Church, third from left, and Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau speak to supporters at a campaign volunteer event, in Toronto on Thursday, May 30, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Arlyn McAdorey

Conservative candidate Don Stewart remained hopeful late Monday despite trailing his Liberal opponent in the Toronto-St. Paul’s byelection where results were extremely slow to come in.

“Let’s not give it up,” he said, in a brief stop at his campaign party at a Jewish restaurant in the riding, around 11:30 p.m.

For most of the night he had trailed Church by between 400 and 500 votes, but when he spoke, still only one-third of the polls and less than 9,000 votes had finished their count.

And with more than 10,780 votes case in advance polls, the results are far too close for anyone to call.

But the story of the night thus far has been the snail’s pace of vote counting, as a ballot that is nearly a metre long with 84 candidates on it is plaguing poll workers trying to get the results counted.

It took more than an hour after the polls closed at 8:30 p.m. for any results to be reported as poll workers had to unfold each ballot like a map before scanning 84 rows of names for the X.

A protest group calling themselves Longest Ballot Committee stacked the ballot with independent candidates to draw attention to the drawbacks of the first-past-the-post system.

Only eight of the candidates on the ballot represent a party, with the rest being independent, and most of those were put there by the protest group.

With one-third of the votes in 16 of the 84 still had zero votes, and 17 had only one vote.

Toronto – St. Paul’s is an urban seat in the midtown of Canada’s largest city that encompasses both some of the country’s wealthiest streets and a higher-than-average number of renters.

It has been a safe Liberal riding for 30 years but issues including housing and the Israel-Hamas war are eating into Liberal support, as is a general malaise for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

The riding is considered a must-win for the Liberals, with a loss expected to put pressure on Trudeau to step down ahead of the next election.

Church is a longtime Liberal staffer who worked as chief of staff for multiple ministers including most recently Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland.

Don Stewart is a financial professional who has previously worked at a lobbying firm owned by Byrne.

The byelection was prompted by the resignation of former Liberal MP Carolyn Bennett, who held the seat for more than 25 years and was recently appointed ambassador to Denmark.

Bennett won the seat in every election since 1997, usually with more than 50 per cent of the vote.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 24, 2024.

-By Mia Rabson in Ottawa and Sheila Reid in Toronto.

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