Bloc Québécois candidate who lost by one vote loses bid to have election cancelled
MONTREAL — A Superior Court judge has rejected a Bloc Québécois candidate’s request for a new election in the Montreal-area riding of Terrebonne, won by the federal Liberals in April with a margin of a single vote.
Nathalie Sinclair-Desgagné, who came in second, had challenged the result after a Bloc voter revealed that her special ballot was returned to her because of an error in the address on the envelope provided by Elections Canada. Sinclair-Desgagné had argued that the error was an irregularity that influenced the outcome of the close result.
But in a ruling delivered Monday, Justice Éric Dufour says the postal code error does not constitute an irregularity as defined under federal electoral law. “It is a simple human error, which sometimes occurs in general elections, committed inadvertently and without any dishonest or malicious intent,” the judge wrote.
“In this sense, and despite the disappointing result for the elector and Sinclair-Desgagné, this error in no way affects the integrity of the Canadian electoral system in which citizens can still have confidence.”


