INVESTIGATION
INVESTIGATIONIn-and-out worth $100,000 in payouts
Documents show one Conservative riding got $34,000 back but only spent $12,000 of its own cash
CBC News
Posted: Mar 7, 2011 5:03 AM ET
Last Updated: Mar 7, 2011 8:38 PM ET
Related
Elections Canada paid out more than $100,000 to Conservative riding associations before the party's so-called "in-and-out" scheme was discovered, a CBC News investigation has found.
Elections Canada paid out the expense claims of 17 "in-and-out" participants before noticing something was amiss, it says in court documents.
That meant more than $100,000 in taxpayer dollars going out the door before it was stopped.
Four high-ranking Conservatives, including two Senators, are charged under the Elections Act with moving more than a million dollars through local ridings to help fund the national campaign.
Conservative MP Steven Blaney says he and all the other candidates who participated were following the rules.
Court documents show Blaney's 2006 election campaign was one of those that received money from the national party, transferred it immediately back, and then claimed the money as part of its election expenses.
A comparison of Elections Canada documents and the ones filed in court reveals Blaney's campaign received $18,000 more in reimbursements than it was entitled to. Blaney says his campaign did nothing wrong.
"There is a difference of interpretation of the law between Conservatives and Elections Canada," he said.
Elections Canada reimburses all candidates 60 per cent of their eligible expenses if they meet a certain threshold of votes. The money comes from the public purse.
Riding reimbursed more than it spent
Another riding that appears to have received some of that money is the Conservative riding association in Hull-Aylmer, Que.
That association spent only about $12,000 of its own money in the 2006 election, according to numbers from Elections Canada, but received almost $34,000 in reimbursements because of the "in-and-out" tactic.
David Herle, the Liberal campaign director in 2006, says the $1.5 million extra the Conservatives spent could have changed the outcome of a close election.
"I don't know if it was decisive. It was influential," Herle told CBC News.
"They clearly intended it to be influential or they wouldn't have done it. If they didn't think it would have made any difference, they wouldn't have gone to such great lengths."
Andre Thouin, an official with Elections Canada, knocks on the door of Conservative Party Headquarters of Canada in Ottawa on April 15, 2008, during an RCMP raid of the office. (Tom Hanson/Canadian Press)Pierre Poilievre, parliamentary secretary to the prime minister, says all the parties use the same strategy.
"The national party did indeed transfer funds to local campaigns, which is legal, ethical and commonplace among all political parties," he said in the Commons last week.
But the NDP's national campaign director says in those cases the money goes from national to local and then stops.
"That money then should be spent on local projects and that is not the case with the Conservatives. But that was the case with the New Democrats. That's why we're not up on charges," Brad Lavigne said.
Beyond a leg-up in the 2006 campaign, the "in-and-out" scheme may have helped the Conservatives in the next one as well.
All candidates who get at least 10 per cent of the vote are entitled to the 60 per cent reimbursement of election expenses.
For some campaigns, the scheme could have been quite lucrative, landing them taxpayer funded reimbursements worth thousands of dollars more than Elections Canada says they actually spent — a surplus that could be retained by the riding association for the 2008 election.
Share Tools
UPDATED | OotD - No Sleep Till ... 3rd Reading of the CP Back To Work Bill! by Kady O'Malley May. 29, 2012 12:22 PM Your official unofficial guide to the marathon sitting day to come
Top News Headlines
- Ottawa won't appeal veterans' court victory on pensions
- The federal government will not appeal a Federal Court of Canada ruling that rejected clawbacks from the pensions of disabled veterans. more »
- New Italian earthquake death toll rises to 15
- A magnitude 5.8 earthquake hit northern Italy on Tuesday, killing at least 15 people in the same region still struggling to recover from another fatal tremor on May 20. more »
- Bullyproof: One classroom confession
- Yolly describes bullying tactics used by girls. Her story is one of 150 gathered in a video confessional booth at a Quebec school. more »
- Falling debris that hit cars came from jet engine
- Debris that fell from the sky and damaged a number of cars near Toronto's Pearson International Airport originated from the engine of an Air Canada airplane that made an emergency landing Monday, an official with the Transportation Safety Board confirmed today. more »
Latest Politics News Headlines
- Robocalls may need regulating, elections chief tells MPs
- Elections Canada may recommend regulating robocalls following 1,100 complaints from the last election, the Chief Electoral Officer told MPs today. He also said the agency is reviewing voter registration rules after results in a Toronto riding were thrown out. more »
- Canada joins allies in mass expulsion of Syrian diplomats
- Canada has joined its allies in a co-ordinated expulsion of Syrian diplomats, as the Assad regime continues to engage in brutal violence against its own people. more »
- Social media websites ignoring privacy laws, watchdog says
- Canada's privacy commissioner said today she is concerned some social media companies are disregarding privacy laws, and called for the federal government to impose stronger penalties when they are breached. more »
- Ottawa won't appeal veterans' court victory on pensions
- The federal government will not appeal a Federal Court of Canada ruling that rejected clawbacks from the pensions of disabled veterans. more »
- B.C. premier misses Western Premiers' Conference
- B.C. Premier Christy Clark won't be going to the Western Premiers' Conference today in Edmonton, but her party is still joining the western attack on federal NDP Leader Thomas Mulcair. more »
The National
The House
- Qc students open the door to compromise May. 28, 2012 3:37 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.
- Richard Branson suggests naked kitesurfing to premier
- 'Engine shutdown' forced Air Canada jet to land
- Evolution skeptics will soon be silenced by science: Richard Leakey
- Tornado could touch down in eastern Ontario
- Newly discovered malware most lethal cyberweapon to date
- Canada has higher proportion of seniors than ever before
- New Italian earthquake death toll rises to 15
- Canadian climber's body taken off Everest
- RCMP commissioner pledges to rid force of 'bad apples'


