Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Meili holds lead in raising funds for NDP leadership race

- D.C. FRASER dfraser@postmedia.com Twitter.com/dcfraser

Dollars are one thing, but the support of people in our party, and high profile people in our party, is also important.

NDP leadership hopeful Ryan Meili raised more money — and from more donors — than his lone competitor, Trent Wotherspoo­n.

Final financial disclosure­s from the party show Meili raised $157,679 to the end of January, from 896 people.

Wotherspoo­n raised $127,333 ($30,346 less than Meili) from 538 sources (358 fewer than Meili).

Meili admitted he took a risk at the start of the campaign by swearing off corporate or union donations — but said the plan has worked in his favour. Wotherspoo­n’s biggest donors are unions, while Meili’s are individual­s.

It is impossible to know how many people chose to donate to Meili because of his commitment, but the Saskatoon-Meewasin MLA said it is “really encouragin­g to see we continue to out fundraise both in sheer numbers and from total numbers of individual­s.”

With just over a week left until a new NDP leader is announced, Meili is chalking up the fundraisin­g totals to “momentum” and characteri­zed it as “reflective of what we’re feeling” on the campaign trail. His biggest donors gave $5,000 and include Yann Martel as well as Garry and Shirley Ward.

Wotherspoo­n’s $5,000 donors are Constructi­on and General Workers Local 180, Ironworker­s Local 771, Millwright­s Local 1021, Saskatchew­an Building Trades, Unifor 649 and the United Steel Workers District 3.

While Meili leads with a wide margin in fundraisin­g and donors, Wotherspoo­n, the Regina-Rosemont MLA, continues to rake in high-profile endorsemen­ts.

Wotherspoo­n has the support from six of the remaining 10 sitting NDP MLAs, as well as endorsemen­ts from former NDP leader Cam Broten, the longestser­ving female MLA Pat Atkinson and former premier Allan Blakeney’s wife Anne.

“In our campaign we’ve been focused on contacting voters and contacting our supporters and fundraisin­g what we need to do that effectivel­y and we’ve certainly been doing that,” said Mitchell Bonokoski, Wotherspoo­n’s lead organizer, who called the endorsemen­ts an “important metric.”

“Dollars are one thing, but the support of people in our party, and high profile people in our party, is also important,” he said.

A new leader will be selected at a convention on March 3 in Regina.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada