Related
Internal Links
External Links
(Note: CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external sites - links will open in new window)
Members of Parliament, their spouses and staff received nearly $2 million worth of free travel and gifts from foreign nationals and lobby groups between 2005 and 2009, CBC News has learned.
The all-expenses-paid trips, exempt from federal ethics rules, are never audited and logged only in sparse detail with the Ethics Commissioner.
Last year, for example, 54 MPs, or nearly one in six, accepted sponsored trips.
Israel and Taiwan are the most popular destinations. In the five-year period, MPs have taken 101 free trips to Taiwan, 79 trips to Israel and 11 to China.
In the case of Israel, it was not Israeli agencies or individuals who paid for the trips. Rather, MPs were flown to Israel courtesy of the Canada-Israel Committee, a registered lobby group funded by Canadian donors.
Some of the trips to Taiwan were funded by the Chinese International Economic Co-operation Association, a Taiwanese business association devoted to promoting bilateral economic ties with foreign countries.
'Recipe for corruption,' says CSIS
Such sponsored trips have raised concern in Canada's spy agency, CSIS. The agency's director, Richard Fadden, has warned of growing attempts to influence all levels of Canadian politics.
"It's very much a wide-open system that's a recipe for corruption and dangerous to democracy and dangerously unethical," said Duff Conacher, chair of the group Democracy Watch and a critic of free travel by MPs.
Conacher said foreign interests have clear targets.
'I am not going to wait for Stephen Harper … to say "Yeah, you can go on this trip."'—Bob Rae, Liberal MP
"Whether it's changing a law, a regulation, a policy, a program, a tax, a subsidy or aid or trade, policies and actions — all those things are in the interest of various organizations and countries," he said. "And those are the kind of things they're trying to change the direction of."
No party opposes the free travel loophole, meaning the public rarely learns how extensive such gifts are.
Liberal foreign affairs critic Bob Rae said a better system is needed but that the reality is that MPs have no other way to travel abroad.
"As private members, we get no public funding for trips that we take," Rae said. "I am not going to wait for Stephen Harper or Lawrence Cannon to say 'Yeah, you can go on this trip.' I mean, if I waited for that, I'd be a skeleton on the floor of the House of Commons."
"So, we're going to do it ourselves."
Share Tools
Orders of the Day - Whither the F-35 inquiry at Public Accounts? by Kady O'Malley May. 31, 2012 9:11 AM Public Accounts committee meets behind closed doors to debate fate of procurement investigation
Top News Headlines
- Oda's staff silent on travel expense changes
- International Cooperation Minister Bev Oda's office is refusing to explain why travel expenses required to be posted on her website have been amended from their original amounts or to answer whether she's paid taxpayers back for any inappropriate expenses. more »
- Quebec students want 'clear' answer to latest offer
- Leaders of Quebec's student associations say they've handed the government a new offer to end the province's months-long crisis over higher education and hope to hear a 'clear' answer on Thursday. more »
- Creating undetectable computer virus 'surprisingly simple'
- Since the Flame computer virus was discovered earlier this week, much attention has been focused on its sophistication. But online security experts say the fact that it went unnoticed for two to five years highlights another problem: the poor state of virus detection. more »
- RIM has make-or-break summer ahead, analysts say
- Canadian technology giant Research In Motion faces a crucial test in the months ahead, telecom and industry observers say, as the company works to bring new devices to market while weathering a slowdown in sales. more »
Latest Politics News Headlines
- Oda's staff silent on travel expense changes
- International Cooperation Minister Bev Oda's office is refusing to explain why travel expenses required to be posted on her website have been amended from their original amounts or to answer whether she's paid taxpayers back for any inappropriate expenses. more »
- NDP Leader Tom Mulcair to visit Alberta oilsands
- Federal NDP Leader Tom Mulcair is getting his first look at the Alberta oilsands on Thursday. more »
- Dogs out-fetch high-tech tools in prison war on drugs
- The Conservative government has spent millions of dollars on sophisticated technology to enforce its "zero tolerance" policy on drugs in federal prisons, but new tools have detected only a small fraction of the narcotics, pills and alcohol seized behind bars, records show. more »
- Mexico wants to increase temporary workers in Canada
- Mexico wants to increase its foreign workforce in Canada, despite the Conservative government's new employment insurance rules that aim to fill vacant jobs with unemployed Canadians instead. more »
- Harper announces hunting and angling panel
- Speaking at the inaugural National Fish and Wildlife Conservation Congress in Ottawa, Prime Minister Stephen Harper announces creation of a hunting and angling advisory panel. more »
The National
The House
- Qc students open the door to compromise May. 30, 2012 4:18 PM This week on The House, Evan Solomon explores the ongoing student protests in Quebec. The conflict that began as a disagreement between certain student associations and the provincial government over tuition hikes seems to have morphed into something larger. Evan talks to Leo Bureau-Blouin, the president of Quebec's College Student Federation, about the ongoing dispute. Then, Quebec's Finance Minister Raymond Bachand talks about what it will take to resolve the conflict, and if an election is the only solution.
- Body parts suspect the focus of international manhunt
- Body parts suspect may have filmed killing
- Who is Luka Rocco Magnotta?
- How an 11-year-old survived Houla massacre
- Oda's staff silent on travel expense changes
- Donald Trump insists Obama was born in Kenya
- Photos show where abducted Winnipeg kids were kept
- RCMP kill double-homicide suspect in B.C.
- Troubled Air Canada plane dumped tonnes of fuel


