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  • When voters choose ethnicity over issues

    National Post (Canada)
    March 31, 2004 Wednesday All but Toronto Edition

    When voters choose ethnicity over issues

    by James Cowan


    In the final installment of the Post's series on ethnopolitics, James
    Cowan visits Don Valley East, where ethnic alliances determined not
    just the issues, but the backroom battles that decided the Liberal
    nomination.

    - - -

    TORONTO - Visible minorities are the visible majority in Don Valley
    East, a riding where last Sunday the crowd outside the Liberal
    nomination meeting fiddled with prayer beads, nibbled on Persian
    cookies and chewed Turkish delight. They spoke Farsi, Tamil, Armenian
    and Greek. They rarely spoke English -- unless they were chatting
    with a different ethic contingent.

    Four candidates were vying to replace David Collenette, the former
    cabinet minister and Chretien loyalist. Many assumed John Kazanjian,
    a Bay Street lawyer closely associated with Paul Martin, would easily
    win the nomination.

    But he faced still competition from three candidates: George
    Kalkounis, a former riding president of Greek extraction; Ali
    Ehsassi, a legal scholar who had the backing of the large Iranian
    community; and Yasmin Ratansi, an accountant with a solid base
    amongst South Asian voters.

    Sixty per cent of the residents of Don Valley East are immigrants.
    Fifty-five per cent speak a mother tongue other than English.
    Twenty-one per cent still live in homes that function in a foreign
    language.

    These demographics dictated not only the issues discussed by the
    candidates, but also the machinations taking place in the backrooms.
    There were allegations that the South Asian community stacked the
    membership list with illegitimate forms. There were cheat sheets to
    help first-generation immigrants understand the complex balloting
    process. And there was the suggestion the successful campaign won
    because many voters didn't understand how to mark their ballots
    correctly.

    It's not that there weren't issues that might have been of interest
    -- the promise of new training opportunities for immigrants, or
    faster accreditation programs for professionals from overseas. But
    campaign workers said the voters didn't care about these things. What
    mattered to them was what ethnic group an individual represented.

    "I was very shocked and surprised by how people weren't engaging on
    the issues," said one high ranking campaign official, "I never
    thought you'd literally get pigeonholed into a particular community.
    But that's what nominations come down to."

    This tribal mentality resulted in some intriguing exchanges as the
    throng waited to vote on Sunday.

    "Support John Kazanjian," said one campaign worker, attempting to
    hand a button to a man in line.

    "But I'm Persian," responded the man, implying he would be backing
    Mr. Ehsassi. "I'm Persian too," said the Kazanjian supporter.

    "And you're supporting John? That is a crime," said the man.

    Ms. Ratansi insisted she had broad support, but nevertheless made
    clear efforts to win the backing of the South Asian community.

    "I am the only candidate in this contest who is of South Asian
    heritage and understands your issues, because they are my issues
    too," she said in an interview with the Weekly Voice, a community
    newspaper.

    The Ratansi and Ehsassi campaigns both focussed on limited portions
    of the riding population. According to Statistics Canada, 12% of the
    riding population is South Asian, while only 4% are Iranian. And yet,
    standing outside the middle school at some points, one could easily
    believe one-half the local populous spoke Farsi and the other half
    Tamil. With the emphasis on these communities, other groups went
    untapped, including significant Chinese, black and WASP populations.
    In fact, of the nearly 5,000 members eligible to vote, only 220 spoke
    English as their first language.

    "There are not as many Anglo-Saxons involved as one might expect,"
    Mr. Kalkounis said.

    "It's perhaps a matter of the candidates choosing specific groups
    based on the individual's own groups. It's an easier way to achieve
    memberships."

    The masses wearing Ehsassi t-shirts and busloads of Ratansi backers
    made it clear they had drawn successfully on their own communities.
    Mr. Kazanjian boasted of a broader range of support, with pamphlets
    featuring endorsements from local mosque president Assadulah
    Farahmand and Abdulhaq Ingar, the president of Toronto Islamic
    Society.

    But behind the politicking, accusations were flying. The eligibility
    of 700 Ratansi supporters was challenged by other camps (one source
    indicated almost all the challenges came from the Kazajian team).
    Most of the challenges, sources say, related to a voter's signature
    not matching the one appearing on their registration form. In the
    past, these problems developed when one member of a large family
    filled out forms for all of their relatives.

    There were also suggestions Ratansi's team blockaded the parking lot
    at the nomination meeting, an allegation that prompted a shouting
    match between Mr. Ehsassi's campaign director and a Ratansi
    supporter. In the end, Ms. Ratansi forced her small frame between the
    Liberal members, anxious to stop the infighting.

    There were also complaints campaigns were not following through on
    agreements struck before the voting began. The selection on Sunday
    took place by preferential ballot, with participants marking a first
    and second choice on their form. If none of the candidates received
    more than 50% of the vote, then the individual with the fewest number
    of supporters was dropped from the list and the votes were
    retabulated to distribute the loser's votes to his supporters' second
    choices.

    The Kazajian and Ehsassi camps formed an alliance, each agreeing to
    select the other's candidate as their second choice. The Kalkounis
    and Ratanis teams had a similar agreement. However, halfway through
    the vote, there were complaints that the Kazajian team were not
    living up to their bargain. The rumour suggested that Armenian
    supporters were told not to mark a second choice at all. The Ehsassi
    camp only noticed the problem because they had an Armenian amongst
    their Farsi speaking midst.

    The allegations against the Kazajian campaign were unproven and all
    of the campaigns had taken steps to ensure votes were cast properly.
    Each group had printed slips of paper, instructing their supporters
    how to fill in their ballots and providing a handy graphic. Thus, if
    a voter did not speak English well enough to understand the
    instructions on how to fill in the ballots, they only needed to copy
    the slip of paper. While the other candidates disguised their voting
    guides as pedagogical aids, the Kazajian page provided very clear
    instructions.

    "When voting, mark you ballot as follows," the slip reads, before
    telling the voter to choose Kazajian, followed by Ehsassi.

    When the ballots were counted, redistributed, recounted,
    redistributed and recounted again, Ms. Ratansi won a convincing
    victory. The Liberal Party does not disclose the number of votes cast
    for each candidate, but senior officials indicated Ms. Ratansi
    defeated Mr. Kazanjian on the third ballot by a margin of 895 to 580
    votes. "I guess you had the incorrect information," She told the
    National Post, anxious to contradict suggestions she had a limited
    base of support.

    However, those privy to the full results suggest Ms. Ratansi did have
    narrow support, but won anyway. After the first ballot, Mr. Kalkounis
    was eliminated and much of his vote transferred to Ms. Ratansi. On
    the second count, Mrs. Kazanjian and Mr. Ehsassi were closely matched
    but it was the Paul Martin lawyer who won out. Thus, Mr. Ehsassi
    dropped from the contest. However, many of Mr. Ehsassi's supporters
    had not marked a second choice on their ballot, meaning his
    supporters failed to carry to Mr. Kazanjian. Ms. Ratansi was handed
    the win.

    One can only speculate why Ehsassi supporters did not back Mr.
    Kazanjian in the end. Others believe the Ehsassi camp quietly
    withdrew their support once rumours of the Armenian scandal started
    to circulate. Most, however, believe many immigrant voters simply had
    a hard time understanding the preferential balloting process and so
    many Ehsassi supporters failed to select a second choice candidate at
    all.

    Regardless of the reason, Ms. Ratansi will apparently have a hard
    time convincing some Liberals that she is the candidate with appeal
    beyond her South Asian roots.

    "It's a wasted nomination," one prominent Kazanjian supporter told
    the Post, "No matter who the Conservatives put in here, she can't
    win. All of her support is with the South Asians, she can't reach out
    to the broader community. Either of the guys -- Ali or John -- could
    have done it. But she can't win the seat. And all I know is I'm not
    going to help her with the fight."

    GRAPHIC: Black & White Photo: Zoran Bozicevic, National Post; Voters
    wait inside Milne Valley School to vote for a Liberal candidate in
    Toronto's Don Valley East riding.
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