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A woman protesting the robocall scandal on Parliament Hill. The 2011 Canadian federal election voter suppression scandal (also known as the Robocall scandal, Robogate, or RoboCon) is a political scandal stemming from events during the 2011 Canadian federal election.
This article lists some of the controversies in the 2011 Canadian federal election. In February 2012 a Conservative Party of Canada staffer resigned among widespread calls of election fraud. This fraud involved both live and robocalls in 39 ridings and were linked to the Conservative government. These calls were aimed at opposition party voters ...
In early 2012, there were allegations of voter suppression during the election, starting the robocall scandal. Elections Canada and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) investigated claims that robocalls were used in an attempt to dissuade voters from casting their ballot by telling them their poll stations had changed location. [136]
[2] [3] Sona, perhaps along with others, had arranged for the calls in an attempt to suppress voters intending to vote for other political parties. [4] [5] After the allegations first arose in the media, Sona appeared on CBC's Power & Politics with Evan Solomon where he denied any involvement in the scandal. During the interview, Sona claimed ...
2011 Canadian federal election voter suppression scandal; S. Michael Sona This page was last edited on 21 December 2023, at 17:59 (UTC). ...
During a news conference in San Antonio on Monday, members of the nation's oldest and largest Latino civil rights group and community advocates gathered to decry the raids by Paxton's Election ...
Canadian Afghan detainee issue; Timeline of the Canadian Afghan detainee issue; 2011 Canadian federal election voter suppression scandal; Canadian Senate expenses scandal; Chinese government interference in the 2019 and 2021 Canadian federal elections
A so-called "robocall" or voter suppression scandal occurred in this riding during the 2011 federal election, when hundreds of Guelph voters who were opposition supporters [5] received automated calls, or 'robocalls', claiming to be from Elections Canada on election day, May 2, 2011. These calls directed them to the wrong polling stations.