Toronto Star

Ford’s pitch for winery hits sour note

Tories say premier didn’t know that Pelee Island winemaker had donated twice to PC party

- ROBERT BENZIE QUEEN’S PARK BUREAU CHIEF

As Doug Ford uncorks a $1,000-a-ticket fundraiser at a Niagara-area winery, the teetotalle­r premier is facing sour grapes for promoting another winemaker who donated to the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves.

Next week, Ford will host a reception at Beamsville’s Redstone Winery. That event comes as the premier’s enthusiasm for Pelee Island Winery in a Twitter video sparked a midsummer online storm Monday.

“Love it. Go out and buy a bottle of Pelee Island wine — it’s great. It’s coming to a convenienc­e store close to you,” Ford said Sunday with local Tory MPP Rick Nicholls (Chatham-Kent—Leamington).

The premier, who does not drink alcohol, was referring to the government’s hope to eventually expand wine and beer sales to corner stores, beyond existing LCBO outlets, private wine shops, the Beer Store and many supermarke­ts.

But Ford’s boosterism led his detractors to rev up a boycott campaign against Pelee Island Winery after it emerged company president Walter Schmoranz had recently donated an additional $1,000 to the Tories, exceeding the $1,600 annual contributi­on limit.

According to Elections Ontario returns, Schmoranz gave the governing party $1,050 on Feb. 26 and then $1,000 on July 12.

The Tories said they have returned the $450 overcontri­bution to the winemaker and emphasized the premier was unaware of his donation.

On Twitter, the winery said Schmoranz met with Ford “to discuss the future of the wine and grape industry” in Ontario.

“Our goal (is) to share issues facing all ON wineries/grape growers including a taxation policy that supports the industry by not taxing ON like imports. We apologize that this goal is not being focused on,” the winery tweeted.

But the Twitter damage was done — #BoycottPel­eeWinery was the top trending topic in Toronto on Monday afternoon.

Last November, the Tories, who toppled former premier Kathleen Wynne’s Liberals almost 14 months ago, loosened fundraisin­g laws, including removing a ban on politician­s’ attending fundraisin­g events.

Critics have argued that such dinners and receptions are tantamount to “cash for access” so the wealthy can get face time with political leaders.

Ford will deliver a keynote speech at the Redstone Winery on Aug. 8. The PC party is promising contributo­rs that Tory MPPs will also be in attendance at the 6-8 p.m. reception.

On Oct. 3, Ford hosts a $600a-ticket fundraiser in Sudbury.

According to the most recent Elections Ontario data, the Tories have raised more than $4 million this year from 7,107 donors. That tally does not include donations from people who give less than $100.

In comparison, the Liberals have collected $1.2 million from 3,485 contributo­rs; the New Democrats have brought in $864,372 from 13,694 donors; and the Greens have received $454,583 from 1,972 Ontarians, meaning the Tories have raised $1.56 million more than the other major parties combined.

The next provincial election is not until 2022.

On Aug. 17, Municipal Affairs Minister Steve Clark will host a $150-a-head “Afternoon in the Islands” lobster and prime rib buffet with open bar at the Glen House Resort in the Thousand Islands.

Then, on Aug. 22, Michael Tibollo, the associate minister of mental health and addictions, will host a $500-a-ticket “Get Some ‘BBQ and A’ Time” barbecue at the Fontana Primavera banquet centre from 7to10 p.m.

In February, the Star revealed the Conservati­ves had enlisted lobbyists to sell tickets to Ford’s $1,250-a-ticket dinner at the Toronto Congress Centre.

Three years ago, the Wynne Liberals were forced to revamp campaign-finance legislatio­n after a 2016 probe by the Star’s Martin Regg Cohn revealed the Grits had fundraisin­g quotas that ministers were expected to meet.

The Liberal government lowered the $9,975 annual cap on contributi­ons to $1,200 and closed loopholes that enabled donors to give much more than that during byelection­s and party leadership races.

As well, corporate and union donations were outlawed and all MPPs and candidates were prohibited from attending political fundraiser­s. To offset the restrictio­ns, a per-vote public subsidy is given to each party based on how many ballots were cast.

That means the Tories receive $6.3 million annually while the NDP gets $5.2 million, the Liberals about $3 million, and the Greens around $700,000

The Conservati­ves kept the subsidies in place as well as the corporate and union ban, but increased the maximum contributi­on to $1,600 and again allowed politician­s to attend fundraisin­g events.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada