Toronto

Ontario snowbirds worry they won't be able to vote in Ford's snap election

Seniors who are already out of the country are trying to figure out how to vote by mail, while those about to leave worry they'll be casting early ballots without a full picture of what the parties are promising at a crucial moment in Ontario's history.

Seniors heading abroad will likely be stuck voting by mail during winter election

Patricia Williams, right, wrote to CBC News asking how Ontario snowbirds like her and her husband, right, will be able to vote in this snap election, which is set for Feb. 27.
Patricia Williams, right, wrote to CBC News asking how Ontario snowbirds like her and her husband, left, will be able to vote in this snap election, which is set for Feb. 27. (Submitted by Patricia Williams)

When Patricia Williams heard Doug Ford hint an early election was in the wings, she wrote to the PC Leader with a plea: don't do it, because she's got a flight to catch.

Williams, like many retired seniors, is a snowbird. She said she and her husband have voted in every election they've had a chance to since they turned 18, but now they're trying to figure out how to get it done before their trip to Spain, Portugal and Italy in mid-February. 

Williams said she's already come to grips with the fact that when she does cast a ballot, it will be with incomplete information. Most of the parties haven't released much actual policy at this point, and Williams is worried most about the province's economy and health-care system — not exactly simple issues.

"I don't want to be casting my vote on the way to the airport," she said.

"Having an election called with such little time, in what could be an economic tsunami for this province and for the country, just helps to reinforce in the minds of people the skepticism that they have about government. And I'm concerned about that."

Williams wrote to CBC News asking how Ontario snowbirds will be able to vote in this snap election, which is set for Feb. 27. Elections Ontario is also scrambling, but said this week its goal is making sure all 10.8 million electors have a chance to vote.

It will be a challenge, though, and this election follows a 2022 contest that saw just 43 per cent voter turnout. 

Seniors are typically a group that does vote, but a 2021 article in the journal CMAJ Open estimated upwards of 53,000 in this province travel to warmer climes in the winter months.

  • Do you have a good question about the Ontario election? Email us at Ask@cbc.ca and we'll try to get you the answer.

What we know about how snowbirds will vote

You cannot vote online in Ontario elections.

That means most snowbirds who have already left home will have to vote by mail. 

To do that, according to Elections Ontario, they'll have to apply to mail in their vote before 6 p.m. on Feb. 21. Elections Ontario will then mail them a voting kit, which must be filled out and sent back by 6 p.m. on Feb. 27 to be counted. 

Norma DiGiandomenico, left, and her husband are hoping their voting kits reach them at their winter home in Texas in time to fill out and send back before the Ontario election, but she's worried about the speed of the mail system.
Norma DiGiandomenico, left, and her husband are hoping their voting kits reach them at their winter home in Texas in time to fill out and send back before the Ontario election. But she's worried about the speed of the mail system. (Submitted by Norma DiGiandomenico)

Hamilton's Norma DiGiandomenico said she's filed her application with Elections Ontario, but is worried she still might not be able to vote. She and her husband, lifelong voters now in their 70s, are on a cruise en route to their winter home in Texas and won't be back until March. 

Mail at the best of times, she figures, takes weeks (though one can track the status of a voting kit).

"I don't even know if we're going to get it in time," she said. 

DiGiandomenico said she wasn't pleased with Ford's snap election call.

"I thought he was supposed to do it in June. We would have been home," she said, noting she's one of those people who believes if you don't vote, you're not allowed to complain about who's in office. 

Ford has defended his election call, saying the PCs, who already hold a majority at Queen's Park, need a fresh mandate to potentially spend billions if U.S. President Donald Trump hits Canada with tariffs on Saturday. The opposition parties have been united in calling the election unnecessary, but have all launched campaigns to defeat Ford. 

WATCH | Queen's Park reporter Shawn Jeffords explains why Ford's opponents are fuming about his mid-election trips to Washington:

Why Ontario’s opposition says Ford’s recent comments defy democratic norms

2 days ago
Duration 2:43
Doug Ford says he will remain on duty as premier and to fight Trump’s tariff threats, even as he fights for re-election. But some opposition politicians say this is an inappropriate use of his office and defies democratic norms. CBC’s Shawn Jeffords explains.

CBC Toronto will be seeking reaction from the four major parties on this story Friday. 

Shorter advance voting window

There's another change that will affect snowbirds as well as those who like to vote early to avoid election day lines. 

Greg Essensa, Elections Ontario's chief electoral officer, confirmed this week that the advance voting period will be shorter — three days, instead of 10 — due to the early election call.

Essensa said there are also plans in the works to deal with bad winter weather. 

"We have contingency plans in place," he told reporters at Queen's Park, though he declined to outline exactly what would happen should a blizzard hit on election day. 

That bad weather is what Williams is escaping.

"In Ottawa, the weather's always a problem in the winter time," she said.

For now, she's seeking out as much information as she can about the parties, but said her vote will be a bit of a leap of faith. She's hopeful the voting process for her, and thousands of others like her, works out.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

John Rieti

Senior producer

John started with CBC News in 2008 as a Peter Gzowski intern in Newfoundland, and holds a master of journalism degree from Toronto Metropolitan University. As a reporter, John has covered everything from the Blue Jays to Toronto city hall. He now leads a CBC Toronto digital team that has won multiple Radio Television Digital News Association awards for overall excellence in online reporting. You can reach him at john.rieti@cbc.ca.

With files from Lorenda Reddekopp