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Column: A rude awakening on political donations

Earlier this month, the Globe and Mail reported that lobbyists in this province have been making political donations on behalf of their clients, effectively camouflaging the identity of the real donors and breaking B.C.’s Elections Act in the process
Dermod
Dermod Travis

Earlier this month, the Globe and Mail reported that lobbyists in this province have been making political donations on behalf of their clients, effectively camouflaging the identity of the real donors and breaking B.C.’s Elections Act in the process. Shortly thereafter, Elections B.C. announced it was conducting an investigation into the Globe’s findings. Five days later, the entire matter was referred to the RCMP.

To think it was only in January that Advanced Education Minister Andrew Wilkinson was boasting to CKNW’s Jon McComb that British Columbia has the “most transparent disclosure system in the world.”

B.C. doesn’t even have the most transparent system in Canada. For instance, five Canadian provinces have lower reporting thresholds than the $250 set by B.C. And even then it’s predicated on the donor being up front with the party and the party with Elections B.C.

The BC Liberals tried to wave-off the Globe’s report by calling the whole thing a “misunderstanding of the rules around political contributions.”

Lobbyists aren’t the first group that comes to mind when you’re thinking of individuals that might grapple with the intricacies of election legislation.

Some of those caught up in the Globe’s investigation may include a former solicitor general, a former deputy minister, a former assistant deputy minister and immediate family members to two prominent political families.

One of the lobbyists featured in the Globe’s report is Woodfibre LNG’s vice-president of corporate affairs, Byng Giraud. In 2015, Giraud was quoted as saying the company “supports both political parties [financially].” Mighty fine people.

Search Elections B.C.’s database of party donors and Woodfibre LNG has donated $30,500 to the BC Liberals and $15,500 to the NDP (2005 to 2015). Check the five other names Woodfibre uses — including Giraud’s — and the spread between the two parties grows from $15,000 to $72,109. Nothing to sneeze at.

It’s tough to imagine this has been going on for so long and no one in officialdom noticed.

Financial agents, 11 years of tax receipts, 11 years of audits, 11 years of training, 11 years of Elections B.C.’s all-party election advisory committee meetings, a fine upstanding lobbyist calling in to explain that the donation wasn’t from him, but his client. Nothing.

It’s not like the Liberal party has thousands of donors to keep track of, either. It only took 285 donors for the party to raise $52.3 million between 2005 and 2015 — and many of those who will have some ’splaining to do with Elections B.C. are among the 285.

So why do it at all?

It could be seen as unsavoury for a donor or a political party to be seen having a financial relationship with each other.

The BC Liberals swore off donations from casinos for years but not from its executives, pulling in more than $400,000 in personal donations from 2005 to 2014.

One other shock? The sense from some of the lobbyists that they didn’t think they were doing anything wrong by allegedly making donations in their name instead of their clients.

With the RCMP now involved, they may be in for a rude awakening.

Dermod Travis is the executive director of IntegrityBC.

www.integritybc.ca

@integritybc