Vacancies in the
House of Commons of Canada are filled by the scheduling of a
by-election in the affected district. The
writ for a by-election must be 'dropped' (issued) no sooner than 11 days and no later than 180 days after the
Chief Electoral Officer is officially notified of a vacancy via a warrant issued by the
Speaker. Under the
Canada Elections Act, the minimum length of a campaign is 36 days between dropping the writ and election day. A seat can, in some cases, be vacant for even longer; prior to the
2015 federal election, for example,
Stephen Harper had to call three by-elections in 2015. However, as the length of time the seats were vacant required that a byelection be called but the length of time remaining before the general election campaign began was too short to justify actually holding one, he scheduled the by-election dates as the date of the general election itself — a technical formality which essentially meant that a by-election was scheduled but would never actually be held. The by-elections were superseded by the general election at the dissolution of parliament on August 2, 2015 and the dropping of the federal election writ. As the
Senate of Canada is an appointed rather than elected body, vacancies in that body are simply filled with a new appointment. By-elections are also held to fill vacancies in Canada's provincial or territorial legislatures. == India ==