B.C. politics already has its dark money – donations that are difficult to trace back to an actual donor – but the free-for-all when it comes to political fundraising in the province has given rise to a murky practice: raising campaign cash from some dark corners of the world.
Its name seems innocuous enough, G&E Studio.
It’s just one of the companies identified among the 76,887 donations the B.C. Liberal Party received between 2005 and 2015.
G&E donated $5,000 to the Liberal Party less than three weeks after a 2015 Reutersinvestigation identified the company as part of “a global radio web structured in a way that obscures its majority shareholder: state-run China Radio International.”
A station in Vancouver – CHMB AM1320 – broadcasts G&E’s state-approved content. CHMB is owned and operated by Mainstream Broadcasting. Before her election in 2013, International Trade and Minister Teresa Wat was the president and CEO of Mainstream.
G&E isn’t the only state-controlled Chinese company to donate to parties in B.C.
The Bank of China contributed $388 to the Liberals in 2015 and Canadian Kailuan Dehua Mines – part of the Kailuan Group – has given the party $59,974 and $7,375 to the B.C. NDP (2011 to 2014).
A genuine interest in B.C. politics might not be top of mind when the cheques get cut.
In one of China’s state-run newspapers, Huang Xiangmo, chairman of the Yuhu Group of developers, wrote this in regard to Australian politicians: “(They’re) not delivering … We need to learn how to have a more efficient combination between political requests and political donations.”
To date, neither Yuhu nor Huang have made donations in B.C. Lucky for us.
And China isn’t the only foreign country whose state-controlled enterprises are coughing up cash for parties in the province.
Progress Energy has donated $12,750 to the Liberals. Progress is a wholly owned subsidiary of Petronas, a Malaysian state-controlled energy company.
Petronas is also the majority partner in Pacific NorthWest LNG, which has donated $21,700 to the Liberals and $350 to the NDP.
Closer to home, Texas-based Kinder Morgan boasts on its website that it’s “committed to being a good corporate citizen and conducting ourselves in an ethical and responsible manner. We spend hundreds of millions of dollars each year on integrity management and maintenance programs.”
It might want to ask for some of its money back.
The website goes on to note the company does not have “a political action committee. Any political contributions made by executives or employees are made individually as private citizens with their own personal money.” Highly noble of them, except for the matter of $33,188 in donations to the Liberals through 11 corporate cheques over nine years.
California-based Edison Power gave the Liberals $10,000 in 2016, and Pacific Gas & Electric Co. $1,832 in 2009. Both companies were on the winning side when B.C. Hydro reached a $750-million, out-of-court settlement in 2013, after its subsidiary Powerex was accused of “gaming the energy market by purchasing and exporting to Canada huge quantities of electricity California needed and then selling it back to the state at exorbitant prices.”
Most foreign donors can be traced to a country, but not all. Sakuna Natural Resources has donated $10,000 to the Liberals, and Orient Investment Corp. $1,000. The Globe and Mail reports that neither company is registered in B.C. or federally and that its home base is unknown.
When a party has few scruples about who it will take money from and where they will raise it, you’re left to wonder what’s on the table when the cheques are handed over.
Dermod Travis is the executive director of Integrity B.C.