Ontario political parties want taxpayers to fund campaigns - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 24, 2024, 04:50 AM | Calgary | -12.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Toronto

Ontario political parties want taxpayers to fund campaigns

As Ontario's governing Liberals move to ban donations from corporations and unions and reduce the maximum donation from individuals, they're turning to another source of funding: the public purse.

With corporate and union donations to be banned, parties to get annual subsidy worth millions.

The Ontario Liberals are proposing a new taxpayer-funded subsidy to the political parties worth some $10.7 million each year. All the opposition parties support the measure as a way of replacing lost funding from the looming ban on corporate and union donations. (Bruce Reeve/CBC)

As Ontario's politicalparties move to limit the influence of big money in election campaigns,they're turning elsewhere for funding: the public purse.

Premier Kathleen Wynne'sgoverningLiberal party is bringing in legislation Tuesday toban donations from corporations and unions starting in 2017 and drastically reduce the maximum annual donation from individuals.

The same Liberal bill also proposes a newannual subsidy to the parties worth $2.26 per each vote they received in the last election. It would give some $10.7 million from provincial taxpayers to the parties annually, starting next year, divided this way:

Proposed annual taxpayer funding to Ontario political parties
Liberals $4,212,581
Progressive Conservatives $3,409,912
New Democrats $2,587,297
Green Party $525,531
Total $10,735,321

Asked how taxpayers will react to subsidizing Ontario's political parties, Liberal house leader Yasir Naqvireplied, "Democracy is not free."

Naqvisaid he firmly believes in the "clash of ideas" that happens in multi-party election campaigns. "You want to be able to have opportunities for political parties to engage in that healthy debate. That does require money," he told a news conference Tuesday at the Legislature

While all the main political partiessupport the proposed subsidy, somenon-politiciansquestionwhether money to campaign should come directly from taxpayers.

"That's $10.7 million that isn't paying to build roads or bridges," said Christine Van Geyn, Ontario director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation. "It's $10.7 million of your money that isn't filling in potholes, treating autistic children, or paying doctors' salaries."

The annual amounteach party receives would change in 2019 based on the results of the election scheduled in 2018.

The opposition leaders side unanimously with the Liberals in favour of the per-vote subsidy.

The leader of the Green Party of Ontario, Mike Schreiner, favours the per-vote allowance that will net his party $525,000 next year. He argues that taxpayers already subsidize the parties by giving tax deductions for political donations. (Flickr)

"If we're going tobe getting the big money out, like the union and corporatedonations, there has to be a way of funding the democracy," NDP leader Andrea Horwath told reporters Tuesday at the Legislature. "Having a public financing model, that creates a level playing field."

Green Party leader Mike Schreinerargues that taxpayers already subsidize the parties by giving tax deductions forpolitical donations.

"People being able to direct their donations through voting is more democratic and more fair," Schreinersaid toreporters.

PC leader Patrick Brown supports the subsidy in the short term but wants it gone more quickly than the Liberals' proposed timetable.

"We want it to be phased out completely," Brown told reporters at Queen's Park. "That's still my goal,that it would not be a permanent feature of our elections,"

The bill proposes continuingthe subsidies for at least five years, reducing the allowanceto $1.70 per vote by the year 2021,and reviewing the amount after that.

"Let's have a conversation five years from now to determine whether that per vote subsidy should continue or be eliminated,"Naqvitold a news conference Tuesday at Queen's Park.

At the federal level, the Liberals introduced a per-vote subsidy in 2004 when the Chrtiengovernment banned corporate and union donations. The minority Harper government moved to phaseout the subsidy in 2008 but the opposition parties rebelled.After winning its 2011majority, the Conservativegovernment ended the subsidy entirely in2015.