Saturday, June 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Allowances Will Fill Fundraising Gap For Political Parties In B.C.

The Canadian Press, 19 Sep, 2017 12:51 PM
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's plan to get big money out of politics and shake off its reputation as the Wild West of election campaign financing comes with a potential cost to taxpayers of almost $30 million over the next five years.
     
    Attorney General David Eby introduced legislation Monday that bans donations to political parties by unions and corporations and caps donation limits by individuals at $1,200 annually.
     
    The proposed changes to the Election Act include a taxpayer-funded, five-year allowance to wean the parties off those donations, Eby said.
     
    Starting next year, political parties will receive $2.50 for every vote they got in the last election and funding will drop by 25 cents each year until 2021, the minister said.
     
    It means both the Liberal and New Democrat parties will receive just over $8.1 million over five years, while the Green party will get $3.4 million.
     
    The changes would also ensure that the parties that get at least 10 per cent of the vote are reimbursed for half of their expenses — an estimated cost of $11 million.
     
    Eby acknowledged the NDP did not fully address its position on a vote subsidy before or during the election campaign. He said the government considered implementing a permanent vote subsidy after the May election, similar to Quebec's system, but decided on the five-year allowance instead.
     
     
    "This bill takes $65 million out of the political system going forward," said Eby, referring to the estimated amount that B.C.'s political parties would have fundraised for over the next five years. "We guaranteed the public we would make 2017 that last big money election in B.C. We believe this bill achieves the goal."
     
    He said the legislation also bans out-of-province donations and caps contributions to third-party advertisers. The proposed law does not permit political parties to use the money they have raised since last May's election to be used in the next election, Eby said.
     
    Elections BC, the agency that monitors provincial elections, reported the Liberals raised $13.1 million in 2016, while the NDP took in $6.2 million and the Greens raised $757,268. None of the parties have officially disclosed how much money they have fundraised since the election.
     
    Premier John Horgan said the legislation will take big money out of B.C. politics.
     
    "The Wild West financing of the past will come to an end," he said. "It's time elections were decided by voters, not by those with the most money in the kitty. This bill is what we campaigned on."
     
    Andrew Wilkinson said the Opposition Liberals will vote against the proposed bill, saying taxpayers should not be funding political parties.
     
    "This is a big disappointment," he said.
     
    Green party caucus spokesman Adam Olsen said the influence of special interests through the lax campaign finance laws led to cynicism from those who felt their voices hadn't been heard.
     
    "British Columbians should be able to trust their government to put them, not special interests, first," he said in a news release. "This legislation is a big step towards restoring that trust."
     
    Per-vote funding isn't a new idea. The federal Liberal government introduced such a subsidy in 2004 after banning political donations from unions and corporations.
     
    The Conservatives vowed in 2008 to do away with the $1.95 per-vote subsidy, with then-prime minister Stephen Harper saying political parties should have to rely on support from individual citizens, not all taxpayers. The allowance was phased out and ended in 2015.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Imam Says He Was Told School Tragedy In Saskatoon Happened In Seconds

    Imam Says He Was Told School Tragedy In Saskatoon Happened In Seconds
    SASKATOON — An imam who was called to a Saskatoon school after a kindergarten student died says the Muslim boy's attendant told him the tragedy happened in seconds.

    Imam Says He Was Told School Tragedy In Saskatoon Happened In Seconds

    Rising Hospitalizations Due To Opioid Crisis Puts Burden On Health System: Report

    Rising Hospitalizations Due To Opioid Crisis Puts Burden On Health System: Report
    TORONTO — The federal government says at least 2,816 deaths in 2016 were linked to the opioid crisis and that number "will almost certainly" surpass 3,000 in 2017.

    Rising Hospitalizations Due To Opioid Crisis Puts Burden On Health System: Report

    MP John Aldag Opens Nominations for Canada 150 Community Awards

    MP John Aldag Opens Nominations for Canada 150 Community Awards
    MP Aldag is inviting you to nominate the Cloverdale-Langley City resident you believe has made an outstanding contribution.

    MP John Aldag Opens Nominations for Canada 150 Community Awards

    Achutha Reddy, Indian-Origin Doctor Stabbed To Death In Kansas, Cops Arrest Suspect

    Achutha Reddy, Indian-Origin Doctor Stabbed To Death In Kansas, Cops Arrest Suspect
    Achutha N Reddy was an alumnus of Osmania Medical College and had been practising in Kansas since 1989.

    Achutha Reddy, Indian-Origin Doctor Stabbed To Death In Kansas, Cops Arrest Suspect

    Toronto Liberal MP Arnold Chan, 50, Dies Following Battle With Cancer

    Toronto Liberal MP Arnold Chan, 50, Dies Following Battle With Cancer
    Chan, 50, learned he had nasopharyngeal carcinoma not long after he won his Toronto-area seat of Scarborough—Agincourt in a 2014 byelection.

    Toronto Liberal MP Arnold Chan, 50, Dies Following Battle With Cancer

    Two UBC Students Hitchhike Across Canada, Spending A Total Of $10

    Two UBC Students Hitchhike Across Canada, Spending A Total Of $10
    Philippe Roberge, 22, and Ori Nevares, 23, hitchhiked from Whitehorse to St. John's over the summer in an effort to see the country and mark Canada's 150th anniversary.

    Two UBC Students Hitchhike Across Canada, Spending A Total Of $10