National Electors Study on the 43rd Canadian Federal General Election: Report on Policy and Civic Engagement Issues
Table of Contents
List of Figures
- Figure 1: Knowledge of political contribution limits
- Figure 2: Views on whether the public has a right to know where political parties and candidates get their money
- Figure 3: Views on political party spending limits during elections
- Figure 4: Views on government advertising during elections in another jurisdiction
- Figure 5: Views on government officials campaigning in another jurisdiction
- Figure 6: Views on who is most responsible for encouraging civic education versus encouraging young people to vote
- Figure 7: Views on lowering the voting age to 16
- Figure 8: Views on ways to ensure representation of women among candidates
- Figure 9: Views on ways to ensure Indigenous representation among candidates
- Figure 10: Preferred ballot-counting method
- Figure 11: Preferred method of keeping lists of electors at the polls
- Figure 12: Views on voting on the Internet as risky versus safe
- Figure 13: Views on whether voting over the Internet should be an option in federal elections
- Figure 14: Trust in Elections Canada to protect the personal information of Canadians
- Figure 15: Views on political parties collection and use of personal information
- Figure 16: Ways viewed as appropriate for political entities to contact electors
- Figure 17: Ways in which electors were contacted by parties or candidates during the election
- Figure 18: Views on the potential impact of voter fraud
- Figure 19: Trust in sources of news information
- Figure 20: Recall of false information about voting during the election period
- Figure 21: Election-period concerns about the potential impact of electoral interference on the election outcome
- Figure 22: Post-election perception that electoral interference was a problem in the GE
- Figure 23: Proportion of electors who thought problems of electoral interference had an impact on the outcome of the GE