Canada’s two largest opposition parties are calling on Canadians to be on the watch for election fraud in the final two weeks of the federal election campaign, pointing the finger at Prime Minister Stephan Harper’s Conservative Party.

“Under Stephen Harper, Conservatives broke election rules in 2006, in 2008, and in 2011, so Canadians are rightfully concerned now in 2015,” said Geoff Regan, Liberal candidate for Halifax West.

“Three elections, two ousted MPs, one guilty plea, two guilty verdicts, and thousands of disenfranchised voters — this is the Harper Conservatives’ economic record.”

The Liberals are encouraging voters to report incidents to Elections Canada, have set up a voter incident report website and will be setting up a dedicated phone line on election day to report any allegations of voter fraud or voters being sent to the wrong polling station.

“The Liberal Party is encouraging Canadians who experience irregularities during this election period to complete our voter incident report,” said Catherine McKenna, Liberal candidate in the riding of Ottawa Centre.

“As we saw in 2011, irregularities might include receiving coordinated misleading phone calls, being denied the right to vote due to identification issues or witnessing the organized destruction of campaign signs.”

A Liberal government would bring in tougher sanctions for those who commit voter fraud and will give Elections Canada more resources to combat it, said McKenna and Greg Fergus, candidate in Hull-Aylmer.

Meanwhile, the NDP also warned of prospective voter fraud.

“Stephen Harper’s Conservatives have been caught cheating in every election they have won,” the party said in a statement. “From the ‘in and out’ scandal in 2006, to Stephen Harper ethics spokesperson Dean Del Mastro’s overspend in the 2008 election, and the infamous 2011 robo-call voter suppression scandal that saw then Conservative operative Michael Sona convicted of election fraud, Canadians have had enough.”

In addition to tougher penalties and giving Elections Canada the ability to “investigate and crackdown” on election fraud, the NDP would repeal changes to the Elections Act that it says will make it more difficult for members of First Nations, students, seniors and those without a fixed address to vote.

The Conservative Party has not yet responded to a request for comment.

More to come…