Montreal Gazette

Lobbyists get boot from Liberal event

Fundraiser chance to meet prime minister

- JOANNA SMITH

• There were registered lobbyists who signed up and paid to attend a fundraiser featuring Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in Montreal, but the Liberal party says they were later removed from the guest list.

“Individual­s who were registered to lobby the special guest were informed they would not be able to attend this event, in line with the party’s commitment regarding such checks in advance of ticketed fundraisin­g events,” spokesman Braeden Caley wrote in an email Thursday.

Trudeau promised political donors would not get preferenti­al access to his government, and now the Liberals are trying to show they mean it as they revive their high-profile fundraisin­g efforts, including an appearance by Trudeau at the Museum of Fine Arts in Montreal for Thursday’s party fundraiser.

Anyone could go, so long as they had up to $250 to spare for a ticket, wanted to give that money to the Liberal Party of Canada, and were not registered to lobby the Prime Minister’s Office.

Caley confirmed fewer than five individual­s who were registered to lobby the PMO had bought tickets.

It was a chance for Liberal supporters to get a word or a selfie with the party leader, but it was also a time when the Liberals could once again rely on their surest bet for topping up the party war chest as they prepare for the next election.

The Liberals brought in a moratorium on fundraisin­g events featuring Trudeau and other ministers earlier this year as they worked to develop new rules in the wake of accusation­s they were providing preferenti­al access to the prime minister and his cabinet in private homes in exchange for dollars from wealthy donors.

“There was a pause on

THE REALITY IS THEY WEREN’T ABLE TO FOLLOW THEIR OWN SET OF RULES THE FIRST TIME.

national fundraisin­g events throughout the first quarter while stronger standards for open and transparen­t fundraisin­g events were being prepared,” Caley said Wednesday.

The new system involves holding fundraiser­s featuring Trudeau or ministers only in public places, announcing them in advance, allowing the media to attend and disclosing the guest list within the following 45 days.

Those measures are new, but the process of vetting fundraisin­g lists to ensure no one registered to lobby the department of the “special guest” at the events is not.

Last November, as the stories about cash-for-access fundraisin­g practices were piling up, Christina Topp, who was then interim national director of the party, detailed steps to ensure that the Liberal party avoids the perception it is giving preferenti­al access to cabinet ministers, or placing them in a conflict of interest.

In a letter to cabinet ministers and parliament­ary secretarie­s obtained by The Canadian Press, Topp said the Liberal party vets guest lists for fundraisin­g events to “determine if any individual­s are registered lobbyists with active files associated with the relevant department and, if necessary, take steps so that the individual does not attend the event.”

The Liberal government promised legislatio­n that would require similar disclosure for events involving party leaders and leadership candidates.

John O’Leary, a spokesman for Democratic Institutio­ns Minister Karina Gould, said the government aims to introduce the legislatio­n this spring.

One Liberal source said the legislatio­n will be essentiall­y the same as the measures the party brought in, which would prevent the party having to once again change the way they are doing things.

One significan­t difference, according to two Liberal sources, will likely be the lack of a requiremen­t to open the events up to the media, as there is recognitio­n of the difficulty with any law aimed at governing the press.

The Conservati­ves and New Democrats say they do not plan on taking any lessons from the Liberals.

“The reality is they weren’t able to follow their own set of rules the first time,” said Conservati­ve MP Blaine Calkins.

In the first three months of this year, the Conservati­ves raised nearly twice as much money as the Liberals, from a bigger pool of contributo­rs, even though they are in the midst of a leadership race that could be diverting would-be donations to the party.

“There’s a small connection,” Caley said when asked whether the lower profile played a role.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R KATSAROV / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has pledged political donors won’t get preferenti­al access to his government.
CHRISTOPHE­R KATSAROV / THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has pledged political donors won’t get preferenti­al access to his government.

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