The Prince George Citizen

Conservati­ves top Liberals in federal fundraisin­g

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The federal Conservati­ves entered this election year having outpaced the Liberals in fundraisin­g by more than $8.3 million in 2018, and with extra cash in the bank, the party’s financial returns show.

The Conservati­ves raised about $24.2 million from 104,000 donors in 2018, more than the $15.9 million the Liberals raised from 66,000 people, leaving the Tories with almost $9.9 million in cash compared to the $2.3 million held by the Liberals.

The Greens raised $3.1 million last year from 16,700 donors – their best showing in a non-election year – leaving them with about $1.1 million in cash, a small bump from 2017.

It was the fourth consecutiv­e year that the Tories have out-fundraised the Liberals, based on a review of annual returns filed with Elections Canada. The parties must submit their annual numbers by July unless they receive extensions, as the New Democrats did this year.

The figures provide a window on the financial health of the parties as they ramped up fundraisin­g efforts ahead of this fall’s federal election, when donations tend to jump as supporters rush to fill campaign war chests. And they are also used by the parties to fuel calls for further donations and partisan attacks on their opponents.

The Liberals took aim at the amount the Conservati­ves spent to raise money, which the Tory documents list as being almost $8.5 million in 2018, up from the almost $7.2 million the party spent in 2017.

The Liberals spent almost $3.4 million to raise money in 2018, up from almost $2.8 million in 2017, which spokesman Parker Lund said shows the party delivers “far more value” for individual donations.

For the Conservati­ves, the target was the two loans the Liberals took out last year through their lines of credit at two banks, which totalled $1.34 million. The Liberals also got more money sent to central party coffers from local candidates and riding associatio­ns, which pads the overall revenue figures.

Conservati­ve spokesman Cory Hann said the Liberals will have to “dip further into their line of credit in order to run a campaign” and go further into debt unless they shed expenses – noting the Liberal government’s budget deficits in his critique.

Now the push is on for more money, with only a summer barbecue circuit standing between the parties and the official start of the fall campaign, expected in early September. Election day is scheduled for Oct. 21.

For 2019, the only data on party fundraisin­g covers the first three months of the year, with the second quarter wrapping up at the end of June. What the figures from Elections Canada show is that between January and March, the Conservati­ves raised about $8 million, the Liberals almost $3.9 million, the NDP about $1.2 million and the Greens about $783,000.

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