Elections Financing: The Facts
April 30th, 2008
I believe it rather timely today, the deadline for Canadians
to file their income taxes, to demonstrate how the elections
financing dispute between Elections Canada and the Conservative
Party is just like a disagreement you may have with the
Canada Revenue Agency (CRA).
When you file your taxes, you claim credits or expenses
based upon what you and/or your accountant believe to
be an accurate interpretation of income tax rules set
out by CRA in their various guides. As many constituents
and local businesses can attest, it happens frequently
that CRA will disallow a claim you have made.
Then begins the process of re-assessments, audits, and
the exchange of documents, receipts and correspondence
as you or your accountant and CRA argue over the interpretation.
Based upon these findings the CRA either reverses its
decision and allows the disputed claim, or it maintains
its original decision and you owe them money. When individuals
or businesses refuse to accept the CRA’s decision,
they appeal or even take the Agency to court.
Just as you file your taxes in accordance with your interpretation
of the income tax guide, the Conservative Party and official
agents for 67 Conservative candidates in the January 2006
general election filed election returns based upon an
Elections Canada candidates manual from December 2005.
In my case, my election return was approved by Elections
Canada and a rebate cheque was even issued. It was only
in an altered edition of the candidates manual in 2007
that Elections Canada officials changed their own interpretation
of the rules and used that revision to declare my campaign’s
claim for the ad purchase invalid.
It’s perfectly legal for a party to transfer funds
to ridings. It’s perfectly legal for local candidates
to pay for ads with national content and it’s perfectly
legal for candidates to purchase ads from the national
party.
Every single political party in the House of Commons has
done precisely the same thing to help finance local campaigns.
We didn’t invent the practise … the Bloc and
the Liberals did that. The NDP took part in a similar
arrangement in the 2006 election. These practises have
been used for years and allowed by Elections Canada.
The Conservative Party is so confident that our position
is correct and that we are being unfairly singled out
that we took Elections Canada to court just like a taxpayer
may take CRA to court. After all, the Liberal leadership
candidates took Elections Canada to court recently and
won.
Given that the Conservative Party believes we did nothing
wrong, there was no reason to withhold any documentation.
That’s why the real scandal is Elections Canada
officials showing up unannounced at Conservative Party
Headquarters to seize documents, with members of the Liberal
Party and the media also mysteriously present.
By also showing up with the RCMP, which is NOT investigating
this matter, they confused Canadians into believing there
was illegal activity involved. Yet, in violation of their
own rules, Elections Canada didn’t bother to notify
any Conservative officials or their legal team that they
wanted additional documents.
Canadians deserve an explanation for the elections financing
controversy. Yet it is Elections Canada that must justify
its actions.
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