Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

Liberal party kicks Ruby Dhalla out of leadership race

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Feb, 2025 05:04 PM
  • Liberal party kicks Ruby Dhalla out of leadership race

The Liberal party has kicked Ruby Dhalla out of the leadership race just days before the contestants were to face off in two debates in Montreal.

Party national director Azam Ishmael says in a statement published late Friday that the decision was made unanimously by the Liberal Leadership Vote Committee.

He says a "thorough investigation" concluded that Dhalla's campaign had 10 violations of the national leadership rules, the vote rules and the expense rules.

He said those include alleged violations of the Canada Elections Act, not disclosing "material facts," inaccurate financial reporting and other election finance violations.

The decision comes a day after The Globe and Mail reported that the party had reached out to Dhalla with multiple questions about her campaign finances and possible allegations of foreign interference.

In multiple statements on X, Dhalla denies all the allegations calling them "fabricated, fictitious and fake."

She indicated that she learned of her disqualification from a CBC report, not from the party.

Dhalla said the party had questions about some of the donations made to her campaign, but said none of them were really a problem.

She said six out of several hundred donations involved a couple using their joint credit card to make donations for both the husband and wife.

"This is entirely LEGAL," she posted.

She said another "fabricated violation" was that donors made $21,000 in contributions directly to her campaign instead of using the required custom link that sends the funds first to the party.

"The campaign refunded the donations and asked the donors to resubmit them via the customized link," she said. "These donations estimated $21,000. This was not a VIOLATION. Yet another fake, false and fabricated allegation, designed to keep me from the ballot."

In his statement Ishmael said the investigation was extensive, including "interviews, questionnaires and an opportunity for Dr. Dhalla to directly address the committees."

“The Leadership Vote Committee determined that the violations were extremely serious, accepted the recommendation of the chief electoral officer and disqualified Dr. Dhalla under section 8(i) of the National Leadership Rules," he wrote.

Dhalla had paid the full $350,000 entry fee to the party by the deadline earlier this week, $300,000 of which is non-refundable.

This narrows the field to four candidates: former Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney, former finance minister Chrystia Freeland, Montreal businessman Frank Baylis and former Liberal House leader Karina Gould.

They will face each other in a French language debate in Montreal Monday, followed by an English language debate on Tuesday.

The party selects its next leader on March 9.

MORE National ARTICLES

Two Saanich police officers charged with sexual assault

Two Saanich police officers charged with sexual assault
Police say 43-year-old Sgt. Matthew Ball, and 40-year-old Const. Ryan Johnston formed separate "intimate" and "inappropriate" relationships with a woman in her mid-20s who they met while on duty, and it does not appear that the two officers acted together.

Two Saanich police officers charged with sexual assault

Surrey launches chatbot

Surrey launches chatbot
Surrey has launched an artificial intelligence chatbot designed to improve response to the public about renovating, building and development in the city. The city says the Development Inquiry Assistant was launched after a pilot version was released earlier in the year in April.

Surrey launches chatbot

Canada pushes net-zero electricity target to 2050 as Alberta vows legal challenge

Canada pushes net-zero electricity target to 2050 as Alberta vows legal challenge
Canada had previously signalled an aim to fully decarbonize electricity grids by 2035. But some provinces, namely Alberta and Saskatchewan, said that was simply not doable.

Canada pushes net-zero electricity target to 2050 as Alberta vows legal challenge

RCMP union applauds planned federal spending on border security

RCMP union applauds planned federal spending on border security
In its fall economic update Monday, the Liberal government said it would invest in cutting-edge technology for law enforcement so that only people who are eligible to remain in Canada do so. 

RCMP union applauds planned federal spending on border security

B.C.'s projected deficit grows again to $9.4 billion in latest fiscal update

B.C.'s projected deficit grows again to $9.4 billion in latest fiscal update
British Columbia's forecasted record deficit for this fiscal year has grown by another $429 million, reaching $9.4 billion. The province unveiled the latest quarterly update, the first under new Finance Minister Brenda Bailey, showing B.C.'s debt level to reach $130 billion by the fiscal year's end, which is $1.4 billion higher than September's projections.

B.C.'s projected deficit grows again to $9.4 billion in latest fiscal update

Police vehicle rammed in Walmart

Police vehicle rammed in Walmart
A man who rammed a police vehicle in the Walmart parking lot in Quesnel was tracked down with a police dog last night. R-C-M-P say they received a report of a stolen vehicle yesterday and officers found it at Walmart with the suspect still inside.

Police vehicle rammed in Walmart