The Niagara Falls Review

Kenney’s vow to fight environmen­tal charities may end up helping them

New Alberta premier’s stance could drive up donations to groups

- BOB WEBER

EDMONTON — Alberta’s incoming premier plans to take on environmen­tal charities that he says are blocking exports of the province’s oil, but those groups may be saying “bring it on.”

In his victory speech Tuesday, Jason Kenney repeated his promise to fight back against Canadian environmen­tal groups that take money from American foundation­s with what he says is the covert aim of economic sabotage by preventing Alberta from exporting oil in any direction but south.

“We have been targeted by a foreign-funded campaign of special interests seeking to landlock Canadian energy,” Kenney said.

The federal Conservati­ve government under Stephen Harper tried the same thing in 2012 by spending $12 million to audit environmen­tal charities the Tories suspected of breaking the rules. Donations to those charities skyrockete­d.

Donations to the Tides Canada Foundation, audited (and cleared) in 2012, nearly quadrupled. Figures compiled from federal statistics show the group collected $3.7 million in 2012 and nearly $13 million the next year.

“If Mr. Kenney wants to drive tens of millions of dollars to a few environmen­tal groups, to the detriment of 1,200 other environmen­tal charities in Canada, just do what the previous federal Conservati­ves did,” said Mark Blumberg, a Toronto-based lawyer who specialize­s in non-profits and charities.

“It would be a major fundraisin­g coup for these few groups and terrible for the charity sector.”

The Rockefelle­r Brothers Foundation is one of the groups Kenney has accused of conspiring against Canadian oil.

But figures on the group’s website show the foundation spends almost six times as much fighting climate change in the U.S. than it does in all other countries combined.

The David Suzuki Foundation, another target, said 90 per cent of its donations come from Canadians — and two-thirds of those are from individual­s.

Lead Now was investigat­ed by Elections Canada and cleared last October of violating the rules, despite accusation­s Kenney made Tuesday.

Joshua Hart, who teaches social psychology at New York’s Union College, said Kenney’s speech fits the technical definition of a conspiracy theory: a small group working in secret to enrich themselves at the expense of others.

Most people believe in at least one, he said. Some may be true. But Hart said some circumstan­ces are more conducive to their spread than others.

“When people are out of political power or when they feel they aren’t in control of circumstan­ces, that’s when they’ll gravitate toward conspiracy theories.”

Mark Busser, who lectures on conspiracy theories at McMaster University, said it works the other way as well. Successful politician­s can use such theories to attack enemies.

“This can be a way of pushing back against trends or social movements that can be out of step with their own policy preference­s,” Busser said. “It’s a way of underminin­g the legitimacy of critical voices.”

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