Medicine Hat News

Ford denies claims he sold bogus membership­s

- COLIN PERKEL

TILLSONBUR­G, Ont. A campaignin­g Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Leader Doug Ford dismissed allegation­s Thursday that he was involved in selling bogus party membership­s, and also denied trying to intimidate a would-be candidate.

Speaking at an event in a factory in a Tory stronghold in Tillsonbur­g, Ont., Ford attributed the accusation­s — based on an audio recording and affidavits — to a desperate attempt by the governing Liberals to hang on to office.

Ford, who became party leader this year, said the two-year-old incidents at issue were put to a party appeal process at the time.

“The appeal was totally dismissed,” Ford said “This is the Liberals two weeks before an election trying to change the channel on their mismanagem­ent, scandal and waste.”

The Liberals alleged that Ford tried to sign up people to vote for Kinga Surma, a former staffer in his late brother Rob Ford’s administra­tion at Toronto city hall, who was running for a Tory nomination. According to the Liberals, Ford told the potential supporters they didn’t have to pay for a party membership — a violation of party rules.

The Liberals provided an affidavit from the woman running against Surma for the Etobicoke-Centre nomination in which she says she encountere­d several people on the membership list who maintained they had not signed any forms or paid any fees.

Ford had, however, invited them to the nomination meeting, according to the affidavit from would-be candidate Pina Martino — an interim chief of staff for former Tory leader Patrick Brown. The allegation­s were sent to the party in 2016.

Martino also alleged that Ford intimidate­d her by following her home, but Ford denied those accusation­s. “No, that never happened,” he said. Audio played at a Liberal news conference Thursday was from a man who saw Ford at a Tim Hortons in 2016 and pressed record on his phone, the party said.

“It doesn’t cost you anything,” Ford is heard saying to a person he and Surma were trying to sign up. Surma won the nomination.

Ford did not deny the authentici­ty of the recording, nor that he told potential members they wouldn’t have to pay if they signed up to vote for Surma, but he did deny paying for anyone else’s membership.

Progressiv­e Conservati­ve party membership­s cost $10 per year and the individual signing up must pay for it.

Messages left by The Canadian Press seeking comment from Surma’s campaign have not been returned.

The allegation­s didn’t bother attendees at a Ford rally Thursday night in Hamilton — the riding held by NDP Leader Andrea Horwath.

Paulette Simmons, a small business owner, called the Liberal claims “nothing but mud-slinging from a desperate party.”

Al Smith, who drove the roughly 40 km from Beamsville, Ont., said it was a “smear campaign,” and accused the Liberals of “playing with people’s emotions rather than giving them the facts.”

Ford stuck to his usual talking points, slamming the Liberals and the NDP and promising to reduce hydro rates, which got the loudest cheers from the crowd. He made no mention of the allegation­s.

In Toronto, Liberal campaign cochair Deb Matthews said paying for someone else’s membership could violate election laws against making secret donations and possibly put someone over the donation cap.

Liberal Leader Kathleen Wynne called the allegation­s “very serious” and said Ford needs to address them.

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