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Wednesday

19-03-2025 Vol 19

The vote for the new liberal leader has begun. This is how the process works

Voting in the liberal leadership competition, which chooses Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s successor, is now open.

Registered Liberals have until March 9 at 1 p.m. 15.00 one to cast their vote with the expectation that the new liberal party in Canada’s leader will be announced later that day.

Some liberals tell CBC News that they are frustrated that the online process used to register voters and point to problems with the identity confirmation system handled by the Canada Post.

The first thing that liberals that vote in the management competition must do is to verify their justification to vote. In order to be eligible, voters must have registered as a liberal before 7 p.m. 17 et on January 27, 2025.

The Liberal Party says that those who met the registration deadline should have received a voter -id via e email that they can use to confirm their justification.

Left who have not received their voter -id via E -Mail can request it by filling out A short online form Asking for their E -Mail, first name, mail code and date of birth.

When they are registered liberals have their voter -id, they can confirm their eligibility by entering it along with their mail code, date of birth and phone number in the party’s Online Confirmation Tool.

When liberals have their voter -id and have confirmed that they are eligible to vote, they must then verify their identity either through the Canada Post Identity+ Mobile App or personally at a participating post office.

To help people use the mobile app, the liberal party has produced a video It will guide them through the process step by step.

See | Confirmation of Identity with Canada Post Identity+ App: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zp76p1nomhs

Registered liberals using the mobile app must start by entering their E -mail address. Once done, the app sends their E -mail a code that they enter in the app to verify the E -mail address.

Next, the voter’s image is automatically collected via the app. The image will be compared to a driver’s license or other ID card that the voter must upload after taking a picture of both sides of the document.

Canadian citizens then have to upload a picture of their passports to prove citizenship. If they do not have a passport, they may upload other identity documents to confirm registration under the Indian law or their permanent residence status.

Once their identity is confirmed and an identity+ ID created, Submit Voters Throw their ballot electronic.

A ‘truly hell’ process

Eric Bogdanovs says he and his wife Nancy Shaw had problems with every step of the process, and only after days of calls and e -mail to the party did he be able to meet the identity requirements. Shaw is still trying.

“Someone from the Liberal Party actually responded,” said Bogdanovs, who lives in Saint-Zotique, Que., At St. The Lawrence River just east of Cornwall, ont.

“I just managed to vote by good luck. I just didn’t give up.”

Bogdanovs describes the process as “really hell”, where he leaves him that the Left will not be able to “succeed in running the election (leader).

Shaw says she was unable to use the app, so she went into the post office, but had no luck there either on her first visit.

“We are old people. We have a hard time with these electronics, ”Shaw said. “This was really, really a challenge for us.”

Ron Usher says that when he went to his local post office in Parksville, on Vancouver Island, the staff got him past the problems he had with the selfie photograph. But they were unable to help him verify the picture against his BC driver’s license.

The instructions for verification of the address of a driver’s license say people can take a picture of the change of address tag on their license and upload it, but Usher says it didn’t work for him.

Usher, a newly clarified member of the party, said post office workers could see that he had the right sticker on his license, but they had no way to manually verify this information. He says he does not blame the post office staff, but rather the complicated verification system.

“The personal thing didn’t work,” he said.

“I’ve sent them messages I waited for 20 minutes on their help phone line,” he said, adding that he has sent e emails to the party’s aids Desk, but no one has returned to him. “It has been complete radio madness,” he said.

Usher says he is determined to vote in the race and will continue to fight to have his identity verified so that he can participate in choosing the next liberal leader.

Liberal Party defends the voting system

The Liberal Party said in a statement to CBC News that the voting system for the liberal leadership is “the most secure and accessible voting process in Canadian history.”

“The process is both flexible and secure with registered liberals that can verify their identity and address using the Canada Post Identity+ Mobile app or personally over 6,000 participating Canada post locations across the country,” the party said.

The party insists that the voting process comes with “clear and detailed instructions” and that anyone experiencing challenges will have their cases “seen in front of the voting deadline on March 9.”

Littum