Conservative senators are recommending the government abandon plans to exempt certain fundraising calls from election spending limits, one of nine changes to the controversial Fair Elections Act recommended unanimously by a Senate committee.

The bill, if passed in its current form, would allow candidates to solicit funds from anyone who has donated $20 over the past five years without recording the fundraising as a campaign expense. Various non-partisan observers warned it would make it hard to track which calls qualified and would allow parties to make limitless campaign calls to previous supporters so long as they asked for a donation.

(What is the Fair Elections Act? Read The Globe and Mail's easy explanation.)

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The Senate is pushing back against the proposed bill in a Senate committee report set to be tabled this week, The Globe and Mail has learned. The Conservatives control the committee that made the nine recommendations. Another seven changes were proposed by three independent Liberal senators as a minority report.

Among the unanimous recommendations are loosening limits on the Chief Electoral Officer's ability to speak publicly, beefing up robocall rules and requiring voting ballots to have a photo of each candidate.

The changes are being recommended while the Fair Elections Act, Bill C-23, is still under consideration by a committee in the House of Commons and amount to a warning shot from the Senate. If the changes are not made by the House, it could lead to a tug-of-war between the institutions.

The minister spearheading the bill, Pierre Poilievre, declined an interview on the changes, as did Conservative senators on the committee.

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In a written statement sent by a spokesperson for the minister, the government signalled it will consider the changes backed by its party's senators.

"The committee is made up of smart people whose ideas I value. I will read their report carefully when it is actually published in the hopes of finding ways to make a great bill even better," the statement said.

The nine unanimous proposed changes include:

Among seven other recommendations, the minority report warns the bill's proposals would disenfranchise some voters and therefore violate the Charter. It also recommends extending the use of voter information cards, not getting rid of vouching and calling for government to abandon plans to force the Chief Electoral Officer to seek Treasury Board approval to hire outside help in investigations.