Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

High Court Won't Hear NDP Expenses Case Over Mailings, Offices

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Jul, 2019 08:19 PM

    OTTAWA - The Supreme Court may have just killed off the NDP's last legal hope to end a dispute with the House of Commons over payments to political staff, leaving the party's financial picture even gloomier.

     

    The high court declined Thursday to hear an appeal from the New Democrats over a $2.7-million dispute with the House of Commons about salaries paid to political staff after the 2011 election.

     

    The party was hoping the court would agree to overturn a 2014 order by the Commons' board of internal economy that the party repay the salaries. The board is a committee of MPs from all parties with official status, which oversees financial and administrative matters for MPs, including the hiring of staff to work in Ottawa and constituency offices.

     

    In 2011, after the NDP surged into official-opposition status with dozens of new MPs, the leadership opted to have some MPs share staff to do constituency work. The problem arose when the board of internal economy discovered the staff members were not working in Ottawa, as initially believed. Instead, they were in regional offices in Montreal, Toronto and Quebec City that were rented by the NDP as a party, not by the legislators in their official public capacities.

     

    Current Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer, who was then the Speaker of the House of Commons and the chair of the board, said in 2014 that was an inappropriate use of house resources. The committee voted to order the NDP to repay the costs, which affected more than five dozen MPs.

     

    The NDP has always maintained the order was politically motivated and has tried many times to get the courts to intervene. The Federal Court agreed with them but in February the Federal Court of Appeal disagreed, saying the courts had no jurisdiction to intervene in the internal affairs of Parliament.

     

    The Supreme Court Thursday declined the NDP's request to appeal that decision, which is effectively the end of the road for the case in the courts.

     

    The high court, following its usual practice, gave no reason for refusing to hear the case.

     

    The NDP had not responded to a request for comment by mid-day Thursday.

     

    Many of the NDP MPs affected lost their seats in 2015 but were still required to repay the costs. Some argued successfully to reduce or eliminate their bills, as they were able to prove the staff members in question were legitimate parliamentary staff and not partisan workers.

     

    Heather Bradley, spokeswoman for the House of Commons administration, said Thursday she doesn't have a tally of how much is still owed but that the Commons is still working with the members involved to recoup the funds.

     

    Since the last election, the NDP has struggled to raise money and in 2017, the most recent year full information is available, its liabilities exceeded its assets by more than $3 million. It also ran a $1.4-million operating deficit in 2017. Last year the party mortgaged an office building it owns in downtown Ottawa for $12 million to free up cash.

     

    It's 2018 financial statements were due at the end of June but the party has received an extension from Elections Canada so the current state of its finances is not known.

     

    After the 2015 election, when a majority of the 68 NDP MPs named in the case were defeated, the NDP sought an out-of-court settlement that would have seen the NDP's parliamentary research budget reduced in lieu of having the MPs repay the expenses.

     

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau nixed that deal, saying it would condone an improper use of taxpayer money.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Coroner Probes Death Of Quebec Senior Who Spent 36 Hours On Balcony

    MONTREAL — The family of a 93-year-old Quebec woman who died after spending three days inert on her balcony at a seniors' residence wants better surveillance for the elderly.    

    Coroner Probes Death Of Quebec Senior Who Spent 36 Hours On Balcony

    Nutrien Says 34 Workers Trapped Underground After Service Shaft Malfunction

    Nutrien Says 34 Workers Trapped Underground After Service Shaft Malfunction
    SASKATOON — Nutrien Ltd. says 34 maintenance workers have been trapped in its Cory potash mine in Saskatchewan since Tuesday afternoon.    

    Nutrien Says 34 Workers Trapped Underground After Service Shaft Malfunction

    B.C. Father Of Two-Month-Old Girl Acquitted Of Manslaughter In Her Death

    PORT ALBERNI, B.C. — The father of a two-month-old girl accused of manslaughter in her death has been acquitted by a B.C. Supreme Court judge.

    B.C. Father Of Two-Month-Old Girl Acquitted Of Manslaughter In Her Death

    Quebec Town Is Latest To Consider Letting Kids Play Legally On Streets

    Quebec Town Is Latest To Consider Letting Kids Play Legally On Streets
    MONTREAL — There is a growing movement in Quebec to bring back the fun — by legalizing kids' play in streets and alleyways.

    Quebec Town Is Latest To Consider Letting Kids Play Legally On Streets

    Exotic Cats Kept In Dark, Dirty Trailers Seized From B.C. Breeder

    LITTLE FORT, B.C. — The British Columbia Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals says it has seized 13 exotic cats that were found in "horrific conditions" outside of Kamloops, B.C.    

    Exotic Cats Kept In Dark, Dirty Trailers Seized From B.C. Breeder

    Telus Adds 'Endless Data' Plans Amid Wireless Industry Shift

    Telus Adds 'Endless Data' Plans Amid Wireless Industry Shift
    VANCOUVER — Telus is the latest Canadian wireless provider to offer unlimited amounts of data for a fixed monthly price, another indication that the industry is changing how it does business.    

    Telus Adds 'Endless Data' Plans Amid Wireless Industry Shift