Ottawa Citizen

Tory MP gets a dressing-down for wearing party-branded shirt

- JORDAN PRESS

If he had to do it all over again, Pierre Poilievre would have worn a suit.

Canada’s election watchdog said Friday that the former Conservati­ve cabinet minister’s decision in 2015 to wear a party-branded shirt to announce an expansion of child benefit payments broke election financing rules.

Poilievre wore the blue shirt with the large “C” at two announceme­nts on the same day about an increase in the value of the now defunct universal child care benefit.

At the time, Poilievre — the social developmen­t minister — said the payments were from “our Conservati­ve government,” adding that “if the Liberals and NDP were to take office they would take the benefits away and raise taxes.”

In a ruling published Friday, the commission­er of Canada elections says Poilievre’s choice of leisure wear coupled with his statements made the occasion more like a campaign event.

This made the approximat­ely $4,800 in spending related to the events, which the government picked up, “a de facto non-monetary contributi­on” to the Conservati­ve party, and afoul of election rules that limit political donations to citizens or permanent residents.

“The government of Canada is not eligible to make such contributi­on to the party,” the notice says.

Poilievre had faced criticism for his shirt during the July 2015 announceme­nt marking the arrival of 3.8 million payments valued at almost $3 billion to families with children age 17 and under. The payments were a result in an increase in the value of the benefit, and an increase in the number of children eligible.

The Liberals and NDP at the time saw the announceme­nt made in the dead of summer, and three months before election day 2015, as a ploy to buy votes.

The commission­er notes that Poilievre talked in waxing terms about the expansion to the payments, referring to them as “the biggest single one-time pay out in history” and “Christmas in July” for Canadian parents.

But it was the shirt that caught most people’s attention — even one of Poilievre’s staffers.

The commission­er’s notice, known as a compliance agreement, says that one of Poilievre’s ministeria­l staff questioned his fashion choice shortly before the Halifax announceme­nt. Poilievre confirmed that he wanted to wear that shirt.

In the ruling, the commission­er notes Poilievre told him: “in retrospect, he would have worn a suit.”

The text of the compliance agreement says that Poilievre’s intention was to link the child care benefit to the party, “and to provoke the media to cover (Conservati­ve party) involvemen­t in the funding.”

The commission­er says that Poilievre’s words and clothing were designed to make a “positive associatio­n” between the party and the benefit to curry gain a partisan advantage in the ensuing election.

In doing so, the commission­er said, Poilievre broke election financing rules and he’s ordered the now-opposition MP to post a link to the ruling on his website, his Facebook page and his Twitter account.

Poilievre agreed to comply with the relevant provisions of federal election financing laws in the future.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Pierre Poilievre is seen wearing a shirt with a Conservati­ve party logo during a Halifax announceme­nt in 2015.
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Pierre Poilievre is seen wearing a shirt with a Conservati­ve party logo during a Halifax announceme­nt in 2015.

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