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Our View: Burnaby voters deserve better than BC NDP's campaign spending rules

The BC NDP’s changes to the Local Elections Campaign Financing Act were intended to increase transparency and cut back on vested interests funding local political campaigns.
elections bc
NORTH SHORE NEWS PHOTO

The BC NDP’s changes to the Local Elections Campaign Financing Act were intended to increase transparency and cut back on vested interests funding local political campaigns.

But after the legislation’s first major test, it’s clear there are loopholes big enough to drive a campaign tour bus through.

After reviewing the 2018 municipal candidates’ campaign finance disclosure statements, we can see no logic in allowing unlimited spending in the year running up to elections and only putting limits on the final month.

Truckloads of cash were spent by the campaigns of Mayor Mike Hurley and the Burnaby Citizens Association in the months leading up to the final month.

We can’t fathom any justification for why donated staff time from unions or businesses should be exempted from reporting at all, or why third-party advertising rules only kick in when the campaign period officially starts. It makes no sense to cap campaign spending but allow candidates to run up limitless surpluses of unspent donors’ cash.

hurley corrigan
Hundreds of thousands of dollars were spent on the campaigns for Mike Hurley (left) and Derek Corrigan. NOW FILES

Under the old rules, any business or union could give carte blanche. Now it takes days of cross referencing the individual donors’ names to determine who they are, making the new system, ironically, less transparent than the old one.

The disclosures forms are confusing and it’s apparent many candidates do not understand how to fill them out.

Ultimately, after so many years of being the Wild West, British Columbians deserve electoral rules that ensure a level playing field and complete transparency. In some ways, we are closer to that but there is still a long way to go. If the NDP wants our campaign finance laws, and by extension, our elections, to retain any integrity, they need to make some changes and make them fast. No doubt, strategizing has already begun by those hoping to gain office in 2022.

  • With files from the North Shore News