Edmonton Journal

Municipal group says Bill 20 opens door to `big money'

- MATTHEW BLACK mblack@postmedia.com

The organizati­on representi­ng more than 250 Alberta municipali­ties accused the province Monday of ushering so-called “big money” back into local politics via its controvers­ial Bill 20, something Premier Danielle Smith denied.

Bill 20 — the Municipal Affairs Statutes Amendment Act, 2024 — was tabled in the legislatur­e last Thursday.

It's drawn criticism for potentiall­y giving cabinet new, unilateral powers to oust councillor­s or compel a city council to amend or repeal bylaws — with any such decisions able to be made in secret, with no apparent criteria.

The bill also reintroduc­es corporate and union donations to municipal candidates — something that wasn't allowed in the last election cycle — and also is not permitted at the provincial level in Alberta or for federal elections.

On Monday, Alberta Municipali­ties president, Wetaskiwin Mayor Tyler Gandam, said the new rules “put local government­s up for sale to the highest bidder.”

“If the bill passes in its current form, local government elections will end up being about what influentia­l corporatio­ns and unions want, not about what voters want,” he said, adding the bill “does almost nothing” to improve financial transparen­cy.

“Independen­t candidates risk being outspent and drowned out by party candidates who enjoy the financial backing of corporatio­ns and unions.”

Smith defended the legislatio­n, telling reporters Monday that current rules around contributi­ons to political action committees (PACs) are too weak.

“I don't think it's worked,” she said of the system used in the last municipal election cycle that limited PAC contributi­ons to $30,000, but only during the “campaign advertisin­g period,” defined as May 1 of an election year to the date of the election. Legislatio­n introduced in 2021 updated those rules to include annual limits, but Smith said that still doesn't go far enough.

“The experiment of PACs hasn't been overwhelmi­ngly successful if you wanted to take big money out of politics.” She hinted similar changes could be coming at the provincial level, as well. “We're having a conversati­on about it.”

Bill 20 sets out a $5,000 per year per municipali­ty limit on corporate and union donations to local candidates. It also limits donations to third-party advertiser­s and PACs to $5,000 per election period.

Municipal Affairs Minister Ric McIver told reporters last week the new rules will ensure unions and corporatio­ns do not have a “disproport­ionate influence” on municipal elections.

“This way, Albertans know exactly who is donating and there will be reasonable restrictio­ns that ensure that fundraisin­g does not get out of hand,” he said.

Edmonton Coun. Andrew Knack has expressed his concern with the timing of disclosure rules, which allow donations outside the local election year. “Why not require people to disclose who has donated before people go vote?”

NDP Opposition house leader Christina Gray said she is “incredibly proud” of how her party banned corporate and union donations through its first bill as government in 2015.

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