Times Colonist

Relocation-expense battle roils House of Commons

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OTTAWA — The federal Liberals are trying to turn the tables on Conservati­ves, who have had a heyday with excessive moving expenses claimed by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s two top aides.

The government revealed Friday that former Conservati­ve prime minister Stephen Harper’s office paid out almost $325,000 in relocation expenses for 29 staffers — including a single move for one individual that came in at just over $93,000.

The Tories shot back that the Harper staffers’ total expense claims were run up over nine years, whereas Trudeau’s PMO managed to rack up $220,564 for five staffers in just nine months.

The tit-for-tat ploy came a day after Trudeau’s chief of staff, Katie Telford, and principal secretary, Gerald Butts, apologized for claiming $80,382 and $126,669 respective­ly in expenses incurred moving to Ottawa from Toronto.

The duo promised Thursday to reimburse a total of $65,000, attempting to douse the fire that has raged over the issue throughout the opening week of the fall parliament­ary sitting.

There was no let-up in the Conservati­ve attack Friday.

Tory House leader Candice Bergen said the reimbursem­ent is an admission by the Liberals “that they have been using the taxpayer as their personal ATM.” She noted that Telford and Butts are close friends of the prime minister’s and that he had to sign off on their expense claims.

Bergen also demanded to know what is covered under “personaliz­ed cash payout” — an expense category she dubbed “ambiguous.”

In a joint statement Thursday, Telford and Butts said the category covered “miscellane­ous moving expenses” that resulted in payment of just over $23,000 to Telford and almost $21,000 to Butts. They conceded those payments were “unreasonab­le” and would be reimbursed.

“What other Liberal staffers received personaliz­ed cash payments?” demanded Bergen.

The government revealed this week that about four dozen political staffers in various ministers’ offices received a total of $1.1 million to move to Ottawa after Trudeau’s Liberals won power last fall.

It was also announced Friday that Foreign Affairs Minister Stéphane Dion’s chief of staff, Julian Ovens, is reimbursin­g $32,130 of the $119,825 he claimed for moving expenses. Innovation Minister Navdeep Bains’ chief of staff, Elder Marques, is giving back $22,467 of the $103,997 he claimed.

Trudeau initially defended the payments as having followed all the rules of a decades-old relocation policy that was last updated by the Harper government in 2011. But on Thursday, he instructed the Treasury Board to come up with a new — and presumably less generous — policy.

“The difference between the previous government and our government is that our prime minister recognizes the need that more can be done,” said Government House leader Bardish Chagger, who as small business minister signed off on a $69,625 relocation claim by one staffer.

 ??  ?? Conservati­ve House Leader Candice Bergen, left, and Government House leader Bardish Chagger address fellow MPs on Friday.
Conservati­ve House Leader Candice Bergen, left, and Government House leader Bardish Chagger address fellow MPs on Friday.
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