The Niagara Falls Review

Feds spent $17.7M on ads in run-up to moratorium

- JOANNA SMITH

OTTAWA — Canadians can expect an onslaught of political advertisin­g this fall as parties compete for their attention — and votes — by loading their television screens and social media feeds with promises and partisan attacks.

Government advertisin­g, meanwhile, will remain at a standstill until after the votes are counted as the result of a newlyimpos­ed spending moratorium on public awareness campaigns in the months leading up to the election. That meant the federal government had until June 30 to get any ad buys out of the way, and newly-released figures show it allocated nearly $17.7 million to the cause in the first quarter of fiscal year 2019-2020.

The money set aside through the first three months of the federal fiscal year marks an increase of nearly 21 per cent compared to the same stretch in 2018 to pay for various government advertisin­g campaigns. That followed a three-month stretch — the last quarter of the 2018-19 fiscal year — when the government didn’t allocate any money for advertisem­ents.

At first glance, the spending figures could suggest the Liberals ramped up awareness campaigns in an election year, making sure Canadians know about everything from tax credits to services available to seniors.

But a spokespers­on for Treasury Board President Joyce Murray said the money is about twothirds less than the $56.2 million the Conservati­ves allocated for the same time period ahead of the 2015 election, including $11 million to promote the Harper Conservati­ves’ federal budget.

In the end, though, the outgoing Conservati­ve government and the incoming Liberal government spent a total $42.2 million in the 2015-2016 fiscal year on advertisin­g.

“While the previous Conservati­ve government used government advertisin­g for political gain, we have been giving Canadians the informatio­n they need in a responsibl­e, non-partisan fashion,” Farees Nathoo, a spokespers­on for Murray, wrote in an email.

He argued that has led to smaller annual totals.

The total numbers for what was actually spent in fiscal 201819 is not yet available, but the federal government allocated $35 million during that time. It also devoted $39.2 million to advertisin­g in 2017-18. The figure for 2014-15, which is the last full fiscal year the Conservati­ves were in power, was $68.7 million.

The Liberals campaigned in 2015 on a promise to ban partisan government advertisin­g, following years of the Conservati­ves coming under fire for stamping their party logo on oversized novelty cheques or otherwise injecting a dose of blue into announceme­nts for infrastruc­ture projects and other programs.

This being an election year, that math and history lesson did not stop their rivals from seizing upon the spending increase.

In a statement, Conservati­ve MP Stephanie Kusie accused the government of “doing everything possible to stack the decks in the Liberal Party’s favour before the election.” A statement from NDP MP Daniel Blaikie said the spending showed “the unfairness of our electoral system” because the incumbent party “will use taxpayer money to make sure they are re-elected instead of using that money to make life better for Canadians.”

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