Times Colonist

Money makes politician­s stand up and listen

- DERMOD TRAVIS info@integrityb­c.ca Dermod Travis is the executive director of IntegrityB­C.

M artyn Brown, chief of staff to to Gordon Campbell when he was premier, made some refreshing­ly candid comments about B.C.’s political financing culture on a television talk show the other day.

“For the Liberals, the housing industry, constructi­on industry, real estate, the liquor industry, energy industry, certainly the mining industry, big forest industry — all gave exceptiona­l amounts of money, and they got exceptiona­l attention,” Brown said.

Makes one wonder what Brown means by “exceptiona­l.”

Categorizi­ng donors isn’t an exact science, but since 2005, the liquor industry has donated at least $2.1 million to the B.C. Liberal party; constructi­on companies, $3.3 million; oil and gas, $3.8 million; mining, $5.1 million; forestry, $5.8 million; and — from framing to “shadow flipping” — everything real estate, $12.8 million.

A grand total of $33 million, nearly half the party’s total corporate haul, and almost three times what the B.C. NDP has brought in from unions.

Brown went on: “No corporatio­n, no industry, no union gives the level of money that they give to politician­s without expecting special considerat­ion in return, and they do get it.”

Here’s a sampling of what “special considerat­ions” might mean.

There’s the condo developer Bob Rennie’s $329,850 considerat­ion.

The government recently moved to curb shadow flipping in the real-estate industry, except for one tiny exception to the new rules — flipping pre-sale condominiu­ms is still permissibl­e.

In 2014, Mines Minister Bill Bennett shared this nugget with Michael Smyth of the Province: “It’s really insulting for anybody to suggest that because we take donations from a group of corporatio­ns like the mining industry that we’re going to cut them a break. We can’t be bought, OK?” Maybe rented, though. In February, Bennett announced a $300-million electricit­y bill deferral plan for six mining companies. Add up the donations from the six and it totals $2.7 million.

To get a sense of how much that sweetheart deal was written on the fly, B.C. Hydro had to pull its request for approval of a three-year rate increase from the B.C. Utilities Commission, opting for a one-year interim increase while it redoes its forecasts, in part because of Bennett’s largesse.

Forests Minister Steve Thompson took “great offence” last month when the NDP suggested during question period that Canfor ($754,631) and West Fraser ($907,420) benefited from a look-the-other-way considerat­ion in 2014.

When the two companies got caught logging green timber and not “dead and dying pine” — as was stipulated in their licences — Thompson gave the two a stern finger-wagging instead of fines of up to $6 million.

At the same time, Bennett was showering the two companies — as well as Catalyst Paper ($149,465) and Paper Excellence ($90,488) — with up to $100 million for energy conservati­on projects “to help offset rising industrial electricit­y rates.”

School boards and hospitals should be so lucky.

On the Thursday afternoon before the Victoria Day long weekend, the government announced that some natural-gas projects owned by Spectra Energy ($156,585) and TransCanad­a Corporatio­n ($123,451) wouldn’t be required to undergo provincial environmen­tal assessment­s, as an end run around a recent court ruling.

Natural Gas Developmen­t Minister Rich Coleman managed to keep a straight face last month when he told Smyth: “If you want to donate to a political party, you can donate to a political party. But if you think you’re buying anything, you’re not.”

Coleman must have forgotten about that dust-up with his caucus colleagues in 2012 over his proposed boutique tax break for Pacific Western Brewing ($191,932).

He seems to have forgotten about his $10-million stocking stuffer for B.C.’s horse-racing industry, too, the one he announced on Dec. 20, 2012.

Coincident­ally, the Aquilini family ($1.29 million) has interests in the industry.

On one side you have the three boy scouts — Bennett, Thompson and Coleman — swearing scout’s honour; on the other, you have Brown calling it like it is.

As Brown said: “Big corporatio­ns that give these massive amounts of money do so because they get results. They get tax relief. They get credits. It makes the government stand up and listen when they lobby and anybody who pretends otherwise is not telling the truth.”

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