Former Yukon Liberal candidate Tamara Goeppel pleads guilty to election charge

Goeppel changed earlier plea while on trial this week in Yukon Territorial Court

Image | Yukon election sign

Caption: Tamara Goeppel ran as the Liberal candidate for Whitehorse Centre in 2016. She ultimately lost the election to NDP Leader Liz Hanson, and was later charged with violating Yukon's Elections Act. (Paul Tukker/CBC)

Former Yukon Liberal candidate Tamara Goeppel has pleaded guilty to one count of violating the territory's Elections Act during the 2016 territorial campaign.

Image | Tamara Goeppel Whitehorse July 2015

Caption: Goeppel faces a fine and/or imprisonment for her guilty plea. (Tamara Goeppel)

Goeppel was on trial this week in Yukon Territorial Court facing three charges related to misusing proxy forms. She had initially pleaded not guilty to all charges, but on Tuesday she changed her plea to guilty on one charge. The two other charges are expected to be stayed.
The charge carries a maximum penalty of $5,000, and/or imprisonment for up to a year. Sentencing is scheduled for Wednesday in Yukon Territorial Court.
In 2016, Goeppel and her campaign team in the Whitehorse Centre riding visited shelters and other places downtown that are known to house vulnerable or transient people. The campaigners got several people to sign proxy voter forms, giving someone chosen by the campaign team the right to vote on their behalf.
Crown prosecutor Leo Lane said in court on Tuesday that the issue is that proxy forms are supposed to be used only in cases where the voter would be outside Yukon on election day.
Goeppel has said in the past that she was trying to help vulnerable people vote, who might not know if they'd be in the territory on voting day.

Witness says he was informed, signed voluntarily

Goeppel changed her plea on Tuesday after the court heard from a witness who signed a proxy form.
The witness, Earl MacLeod, told the court he did not feel wronged by the candidate.

Image | Chilkoot Trail Inn

Caption: Goeppel's campaign team visited the Chilkoot Inn and other locations in Whitehorse known to house homeless or vulnerable people. They offered rides to polls on voting day and also offered to let people sign proxy forms if they preferred someone else to cast a vote on their behalf. (Philippe Morin/CBC)

Macleod said he was living at the Chilkoot Inn in Whitehorse in October 2016 when he was approached by two people with Goeppel's campaign. He did not identify Goeppel by name as one of the people.
MacLeod said the two people identified themselves clearly as canvassing for the Yukon Liberal party.
He remembered the canvassers first tried to convince him to vote by offering a ride on polling day. When he declined, they offered the proxy form as another option.
"I couldn't be bothered to go out and vote for anybody so I signed the form and said, 'fine, sure — good luck to you,'" MacLeod said as he spoke by videoconference from Vernon, B.C.
"I knew it was for the Liberal party voting," he added.
Proxy forms require a person to tick a box saying they will be out of the territory on voting day.
The Crown repeatedly asked MacLeod whether that statement was true.
He replied that he meant he "wouldn't be around to vote" on voting day, as he had no intention to attend a polling station.
"I am not going to be around for voting, because I'm not going to bother standing around," he said. "I just couldn't be concerned with going," he said.

Image | Yukon Liberal Party - Tamara Goeppel

Caption: The Yukon Liberal Party websites features this image from 2016, showing Goeppel with now Yukon Premier Sandy Silver, right. (Yukon Liberal Party)

Pressed again about travel — and whether he knew he'd be outside Yukon on polling day — MacLeod said he had vague plans at the time to leave Yukon and didn't know if he would be.
"I don't know. Let's say it's true," he said with a shrug.
Goeppel ended up placing second in Whitehorse Centre in 2016, losing to NDP leader Liz Hanson by 55 votes.
In a statement on Tuesday, Premier Sandy Silver — who dodged questions during the 2016 campaign about the allegations against Goeppel — said it's important that Yukon's election laws are upheld, and voters' rights are protected.
"When serious questions are raised about whether a candidate for elected office has followed the rules, they must be addressed. Today's court proceedings have confirmed that the law was broken and I accept those findings," Silver said.
With files from Claudiane Samson