Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
National

Exclusive Fundraisers, Premier's Allowance Not Conflicts: Commissioner

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 May, 2016 11:30 AM
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's conflict commissioner has ruled that exclusive fundraisers and a stipend paid to the premier by the B.C. Liberal Party are not conflicts because they do not amount to a 'private interest.'
     
    Paul Fraser has released a report into a pair of complaints that alleged high-priced fundraisers attended by Premier Christy Clark breached the Members Conflict of Interest Act because they result in politicians receiving an illegal gift.
     
    "The general concern is that it is inappropriate for politicians to 'sell access' to themselves in this manner," Fraser wrote.
     
    Democracy Watch co-founder Duff Conacher filed a complaint last month following reports that Clark participates in fundraising events where people pay thousands of dollars for exclusive access to her.
     
    "We're not saying all fundraising events are illegal, just the ones that are exclusive, behind closed doors, where the list of invitees is not disclosed," Conacher said in April.
     
    "If you are holding a big public event, with a low price, where anyone can buy a ticket and you give a speech and then you leave — maybe shake a few hands, that's it — you are not selling access to yourself.''
     
     
    Vancouver-Point Grey MLA David Eby also filed a complaint about the high-priced, exclusive fundraisers. He later filed another after it was revealed that Clark receives an annual stipend from the B.C. Liberal Party of up to $50,000 per year for work she does for the party.
     
    Fraser's report said Eby described the stipend as being donations "laundered" through the Liberal Party.
     
    But the conflict of interest commissioner disagreed.
     
    "After considering all of the materials provided by the parties and their submissions, I am unable to conclude that the donations received by the Liberal Party in the circumstances described amount to a 'private interest' for the premier," Fraser wrote.
     
    Fundraising for the party is a political benefit, not a private financial one, he added.
     
    The money raised at the exclusive events goes to the B.C. Liberal Party and Clark cannot access it for her personal use, Fraser said, citing evidence from the premier's lawyer and the president of the party.
     
    "It is my opinion that the premier was not in an apparent conflict of interest ... by virtue of participating in 'exclusive fundraising events for the B.C. Liberal Party or by receiving a leader's allowance from the B.C. Liberal Party," he wrote.
     
    Neither Conacher nor Eby immediately responded to requests for comment on Fraser's decision.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Boosting Government Spending Would Benefit The World's Economy: Stephen Poloz

    OTTAWA — Stephen Poloz talks like a man who's had a weight lifted off his shoulders.

    Boosting Government Spending Would Benefit The World's Economy: Stephen Poloz

    New, Trimmed-Down TV Packages Proving Popular For Many, Says CRTC

    New, Trimmed-Down TV Packages Proving Popular For Many, Says CRTC
    The country's broadcast regulator says tens of thousands of Canadians have either signed up for the first time or switched to the recently mandated skinny-basic TV packages.

    New, Trimmed-Down TV Packages Proving Popular For Many, Says CRTC

    3 Families Sue Us Sperm Bank, Canadian Distributor Over 'Schizophrenic' Sperm Donor

    Three Ontario families have launched lawsuits against a U.S.-based sperm bank and its Canadian distributor, alleging they were misled about their sperm donor's medical and social history, which included a criminal record

    3 Families Sue Us Sperm Bank, Canadian Distributor Over 'Schizophrenic' Sperm Donor

    Legislation Mandates Both Nurse Practitioners And MDs To Provide Assisted Death

    Legislation Mandates Both Nurse Practitioners And MDs To Provide Assisted Death
    Nurse practitioners — not just doctors — would be allowed to provide medically assisted death to eligible patients under proposed legislation tabled Thursday by the federal government.

    Legislation Mandates Both Nurse Practitioners And MDs To Provide Assisted Death

    $4 Billion Plan Opts For Frequency Over Speed In Windsor-Quebec City Region

    $4 Billion Plan Opts For Frequency Over Speed In Windsor-Quebec City Region
    OTTAWA — Via Rail will ask the federal government by year's end to climb aboard a plan to run new "high-frequency," electric-hybrid trains in the busy Windsor-Quebec City corridor, says the head of the Crown corporation.

    $4 Billion Plan Opts For Frequency Over Speed In Windsor-Quebec City Region

    Supreme Court Says Two Tough-on-Crime Laws Are Unconstitutional

    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada has ruled that two federal laws from the previous Conservative government's tough-on-crime agenda are unconstitutional.

    Supreme Court Says Two Tough-on-Crime Laws Are Unconstitutional