Federal Elections - Campaign Life Coalition

Why Candidates Should Answer CLC Election Questionnaire

Pro-abortion advisors, party officials pressure them to hide from life, marriage issues

Every Canadian federal election, all candidates are faced with the decision of whether or not to complete and sign the Campaign Life Coalition (CLC) questionnaire on “controversial” life and marriage issues.

It is a recurring struggle pitting candidates’ consciences and commitment to democratic openness against political advisers that often have no respect for their candidates’ personal principles. It is also something that CLC national leader Jim Hughes believes grassroots pro-life Canadians can greatly influence when they pursue the candidates about it.

CANDIDATES WRONGLY TOLD SIGNING WILL HARM ELECTION CHANCE

The Canadian national pro-life organization sends its questionnaire to every candidate in every party all across the country during federal elections. Unfortunately, say CLC leaders, many candidates usually completely underestimate the importance of responding to it. As well, says CLC, many pro-life leaning candidates sadly accept, without any real proof, advice or pressure to avoid the questionnaire because, they are always told, it would harm their election chances.

CLC National President Jim Hughes“To put it a lot milder than I really feel like saying, nothing could be further from the truth”, says Jim Hughes, the national president of CLC. “I can’t believe that this goes on election after election and that so many naïve candidates, including some incumbent MPs from every party, are taken in every time by the party hacks or the media propaganda on this”, says Hughes.

Hughes says, “openly pro-life candidates get elected and re-elected all across the country every time and often by wide margins, sometimes near the highest margins for their party." “In the last federal election”, he says, “not a single pro-life MP lost." "And when some of them have lost in the past", he emphasizes, "those losses had absolutely nothing to do with their views on the life issues."

“So, please,” Hughes asks, “someone tell me why anyone continues to believe this complete nonsense; that being openly pro-life, pro-family is an election handicap.” “Responding to the questionnaire always helps those candidates”, he states. “Anyone who tells them otherwise has certain agendas, is misguided or is just plain not to be trusted.”

CRUCIAL INFORMATION FOR INFORMED VOTING

“First of all” says Hughes, “answering the questionnaire provides Canada’s so-called social conservative voters with crucial information about who they might vote for and perhaps donate to and work on their campaign.”

“Second”, Hughes says, “if the responses are straightforward pro-life, it tells voters in a riding, whether they are concerned about the life and family issues or not, that this candidate is up front, honest and believes in some serious principles. Principled candidates are seen to be a rarity and are naturally attractive to all voters. The public instinctively knows such a person can be trusted.”

He also explains that candidates have the option of responding in their own words or adding comments to the quesionnaire if they prefer. CLC just wants to know where the candidates stand on the questions.

CLC’s final published ratings do not include endorsements of candidates but it does rate the candidates, as "pro-life", "pro-life with exceptions", "not pro-life" or "pro-abortion". The organization’s Voters’ Guide on its website simply provides information so that Campaign Life Coalition supporters can make informed decisions on election day.

As well, the information obtained is vital because it puts into motion the national organization’s other machinery to assist a candidate. It gives CLC the hard evidence it must have to motivate its large grassroots membership in individual ridings to support and vote for pro-life, pro-marriage leaning candidates.

Mary Ellen Douglas, national coordinator for CLC, also stresses the importance of getting the completed questionnaires back to the national pro-life organization as quickly as possible. “Too often”, she states, “we have had supportable candidates send in their responses too late for us to do anything for them. We need time to get the word out in a riding and give our local supporters the opportunity to do something for the candidate.”

NOT SIGNING SAYS LIFE ISSUES LIKELY NOT IMPORTANT TO CANDIDATE

Hughes laments, “a lot of pro-life candidates say ‘I’m pro-life, the voters know I’m pro-life and so I don’t need to complete the questionnaire’. If a candidate, even an incumbent, can’t take the time to sign our questionnaire then that tells many of our supporters, and especially many new people who also look up our results, that the life and family issues are likely not important to that candidate. Then, especially for new candidates without a  solid voting record, we are left helpless because we have nothing to give the folks to prove the candidate is worth considering.”

“Our supporters,” says Hughes, “don’t act and vote for candidates just because we tell them to. Anyone who thinks that is sadly mistaken. The grassroots wants hard evidence that a candidate has made some significant commitments to do something. No commitment - no action, no vote. And there’s nothing I can do about that”.

MP PARLIAMENTARY VOTING RECORDS ALONE NOT ENOUGH

Some incumbent Members of Parliament have asked why CLC does not rely on parliamentary votes alone. Hughes says that usually won’t cut it since there simply aren’t enough bills on life issues to provide a clear indication of every MPs positions. However, this election there is a more extensive voting record than usual and lots of information from the 2004 election.  Still, to be fair to all candidates, CLC strongly encourages all incumbent pro-life MPs to complete the questionnaire again.
 
Whereas in the United States Congress and Senate there are often several abortion and other life issue bills voted on each session, in Canada there can be years between votes on these issues. Our government's political parties do everything possible to avoid ‘controversial’ issues, to avoid recorded votes and to prohibit their MPs from speaking and voting freely on them.

CLC QUESTIONNAIRE ISSUES MORE IMPORTANT THAN ANY OTHERS

Hughes laments many candidates’ lack of understanding of the huge importance of the issues in the CLC questionnaire. He states, “the hardest thing to accept about all the lame excuses we get every time from candidates for not responding in some meaningful way is that these are the only election issues that deal with the very life and death of over 100,000 innocent, vulnerable Canadians per year by abortion and a number now growing with euthanasia. This is having a massive affect on our nation, on our society, on our future.”
 
Hughes adds, “Our questions are the only ones that deal with the collapse of respect for all human life. This is far more important than anything else these candidates will be dealing with.” “And yet,” he adds, “many don’t comprehend this or perhaps just don’t want to or haven’t the courage to face it.”

GRASSROOTS PRO-LIFE VOTERS MUST ASK CANDIDATES IF THEY SIGNED

He also urges every Canadian who understands the high priority of the defence of life and family to make an extra effort to seek out and ask every candidate in their riding if they completed the CLC questionnaire and answered each question. And if the candidate has not answered the questionnaire or only part of it, Hughes says to “insist that the candidates do so or you will not consider anything else they have to say and certainly will not vote for them.”

“That”, says, Hughes, “is one the most important things the grassroots supporters can do for us.” If the candidate says he or she does not have the questionnaire, Hughes urges supporters to call CLC and they will tell if and how many times it was sent to the particular candidate or will arrange a trained representative to immediately get one to the candidate. As well, Campaign Life Coalition will take responses directly from the candidate over the phone, if necessary. 

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