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SEPTEMBER 23, 2021
This Weekend Friday
160 Saturday
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Elmira, Ontario, Canada | observerxtra.com | Volume 26 | Issue 38
Arts | 14
170
At midweek, election results still unknown in local riding Elections Canada 2021 ↆ Party
ↆ Candidate
ↆ Votes ↆ %
Green Party
Owen Bradley
1,796
3.6%
People’s Party
Kevin Dupuis
3,641
7.4%
Conservative
Carlene Hawley
18,948
38.4%
Liberal
Tim Louis
19,142
38.8%
NDP
Narine Dat Sookram
5,782
11.7%
Unofficial poll count for Kitchener-Conestoga from Elections Canada.
Liberal candidate Tim Louis was joined by supporters Monday night at the Malt & Barley Public House in Kitchener, with the night ending without a decision. Louis was leading at press time.
Steve Kannon Observer Staff
RUNNING IN HIS THIRD ELECTION campaign, the MP for Kitchener-Conestoga jokes he’s becoming known as “Landslide Louis.” Having come up short in 2015 by 251 votes and winning in 2019 by 365, Tim Louis knows something about close elections. Two days after the
September 20 election, he was still waiting to find out if he’d be heading back to Ottawa. At press time, he was leading Conservative candidate Carlene Hawley by fewer than 200 votes, a decision awaiting the full counting of mail-in ballots. “I must have been called ‘Landslide Louis’ five times already today,” he said Wednesday afternoon as he was keeping himself
occupied by picking up election signs. At that point, the Elections Canada website reported Louis at 19,142 votes, 38.8 per cent of the total, while Hawley had 18,948 (38.4 per cent). The field was rounded out by the NDP’s Narine Dat Sookram with 5,782 (11.7 per cent), Kevin Dupuis of the People’s Party with 3,641 (7.4 per cent) and Owen Bradley of the Green
Party, who received 1,796 votes (3.6 per cent). The winner will depend on the 1,574 mail-in ballots outstanding as of press time, with an Elections Canada spokesman saying the tally wasn’t likely to be known until Wednesday night or midday Thursday. “There’s a whole verification process here; we check the signature on the envelope. We make sure that that name
corresponds to the person who actually applied for that mail-in ballot. We try to look at our voters list from advance polls and Monday (election day) to make sure that that person didn’t vote twice. All kinds of little things that can’t be done just like that. Before we even open the little envelope inside that has the ballot can take three to four hours for 500 ballots,” said Rejéan
Steve Kannon
Grenier, noting that Kitchener-Conestoga’s 1,500 ballots would take three times that three- to fourhour timeline. The process can be further hampered by the need to have witnesses from each party present for the review and counting. Elections Canada saw record volumes of mail-in ballots this time around, → ELECTION 2
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