Calgary Herald

Little accountabi­lity for millions spent by riding associatio­ns

- JOAN BRYDEN AND STEVE RENNIE

OTTAWA — Riding associatio­ns for federal political parties are sitting on nearly $30 million of taxpayersu­bsidized cash, with little obligation to account publicly for how the money is spent.

Annual financial reports filed recently with Elections Canada indicate that Conservati­ve electoral district associatio­ns are by far the wealthiest, with combined surpluses of $18.3 million in 2012.

As of last week, the richest of all was the Conservati­ve associatio­n in Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s Calgary Southwest riding, which had amassed a war chest of more than $330,000 — the largest of any riding associatio­n, Conservati­ve or otherwise, in the country’s 308 constituen­cies.

Since then, the Conservati­ve associatio­n in the eastern Ontario riding of LanarkFron­tenac-Lennox and Addington has supplanted Harper’s as the wealthiest, with $409,353.

With straggler associatio­ns still filing to Elections Canada, the tallies remain somewhat fluid. As of late last week, Liberal riding associatio­ns ended last year with combined surpluses totalling $6.3 million while the NDP totalled $2.3 million. Green party riding associatio­ns were worth a combined $972,160, while those in the Bloc Quebecois were worth slightly more than $1 million.

The eye-popping numbers suggest the days are long gone when riding associatio­ns consisted of a gaggle of volunteers who met periodical­ly in someone’s basement to plan bake sales to raise a bit of cash.

Indeed, the financial reports suggest some of them — primarily the flush Conservati­ve ones — have morphed into sophistica­ted, perpetual campaign machines that rake in hundreds of thousands of dollars each year.

“We always encourage our (electoral district associatio­ns) to work hard, raise money and prepare for the next election,” says Conservati­ve party spokesman Fred DeLorey. “We have the strongest grassroots organizati­on in Canada and it shows.”

However, exactly what the associatio­ns do with all that money remains something of a mystery.

Riding associatio­ns used to be known as the “black hole” of political financing in Canada. There

We have no tools to do a basic audit JOHN ENRIGHT

was no legal requiremen­t for them to publicly disclose the money they raised or how they spent it, except during the few short weeks of a federal election campaign.

Reforms to the Canada Elections Act in 2004 shone some light on the situation.

Associatio­ns that wish to issue tax receipts for donations must now register with Elections Canada and produce annual financial reports, which include full disclosure of the names of donors and the amounts they contribute­d.

Those reports also include financial statements that reveal any other sources of revenues, how much was spent in any given year and how much has been stockpiled over the long term.

But exactly what the money was spent on remains murky.

Associatio­ns report tens of thousands of dollars spent on things like “profession­al services,” “office expenses,” “travel and hospitalit­y,” “fundraisin­g activities,” “polling and research,” “salaries and benefits” or just “other” — with no detailed explanatio­ns.

Like political parties themselves, the associatio­ns, also known as EDAs, are not required to supply receipts to Elections Canada so the watchdog agency has no way of verifying whether the money was spent to stage a community outreach event or to buy the local MP a new car.

“We have no tools to do a basic audit,” said Elections Canada spokesman John Enright, noting that current and past chief electoral officers have urged Parliament to rectify the situation.

“You will see the flow (of money) entering the EDA and the flow exiting the EDA and that’s it.”

Riding associatio­ns must hire a certified auditor to sign off on their annual reports. The auditor has “the right” to demand access to receipts and other documentat­ion and “may require” a financial agent to provide necessary informatio­n or explanatio­ns.

But how many auditors exercise their right to detailed documentat­ion or explanatio­ns is unknown. At least one 2012 financial report, for former minister Peter Penashue’s Conservati­ve riding associatio­n in Labrador, is only partially filled in and contains an obvious mathematic­al error, which evidently escaped the auditor in that case.

The Canadian Press did not receive any response to requests for explanatio­ns of some of the biggest spending Conservati­ve ridings last year, including Finance Minister Jim Flaherty’s Whitby-Oshawa associatio­n.

 ?? Adrian Wyld/the Canadian Press/files ?? Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s Calgary Southwest riding associatio­n is the wealthiest in Canada, with more than $330,000.
Adrian Wyld/the Canadian Press/files Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s Calgary Southwest riding associatio­n is the wealthiest in Canada, with more than $330,000.

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