Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Longer Federal Election Campaign Will Cost Taxpayers Millions More

IANS, 29 Jul, 2015 11:46 AM
    OTTAWA — It's not just political parties that will be spending money hand over fist if Stephen Harper fires the starting gun for the Oct. 19 federal election weeks earlier than necessary.
     
    Taxpayers will be shelling out big bucks, too — millions in extra administrative costs and tens of millions more in rebates to parties and candidates for their inflated election expenses.
     
    Speculation is rampant that Harper is poised to officially kick off the election campaign — known as the writ period — as early as this weekend.
     
    That would make for an 11-week campaign, the longest federal campaign since 1926 and more than twice the five weeks typically allotted for campaigns in recent times.
     
    Elections Canada estimates that a campaign this fall of 37 days — the minimum required by law — would cost roughly $375 million to administer.
     
    The agency was not able to estimate how much more a longer campaign would cost, but spokeswoman Diane Benson acknowledged there would indeed be some additional expenses.
     
    For instance, she said Elections Canada will have to pay for longer office leases for returning officers in each of the country's 338 ridings; telephones, equipment and furniture rentals for those offices; additional hours for staff; and Elections Canada staff who handle public inquiries.
     
    A longer campaign puts the squeeze on taxpayers in other ways too, since they subsidize the donations that fuel campaigns and then subsidize parties and their candidates again for spending that money during a campaign.
     
    Most of the money parties and candidates will be throwing around during the campaign comes from donations, which are worth a generous tax credit of 75 per cent on the first $400, 50 per cent on the next $350 and 33.3 per cent on the next $500.
     
    The Canadian Taxpayers Federation estimates those tax credits are worth somewhere between $16 million and $36 million per year in foregone revenue.
     
    Each party running a full slate of candidates is entitled to spend a maximum of about $25 million for a five-week campaign; each candidate an average of about $100,000.
     
    But, under the recently passed Fair Elections Act, those spending limits will increase by 1/37 for each day a campaign exceeds 37 days. That's an extra $675,000 per day for each party's national campaign, an additional $2,700 per day for their candidates.
     
    A campaign that is double the minimum length would effectively double the spending limits and, theoretically, double the amount of money parties and candidates stand to be reimbursed — by taxpayers — when it's all over.
     
    Parties are entitled to rebates of up to 50 per cent of their eligible election expenses; candidates up to 60 per cent.
     
    The major parties are promising to spend the maximum allowed, or very close to it. However, few candidates will likely be able to afford to take full advantage of increased spending limits, making it hard to estimate how much their rebates could go up.
     
    Still, the rebates will undoubtedly be considerably higher than the rebates handed out to parties and candidates after the five-week election campaign in 2011. Elections Canada estimates that tab topped $60 million.
     
    Aaron Wudrick, federal director of the taxpayers' federation, says his organization appreciates that elections, like other fundamental democratic institutions, deserve to be properly funded. In addition, his group does not take issue with leaving the length of campaigns to the prime minister's discretion.
     
    However, he says abuses and excessive costs could be avoided if taxpayers weren't subsidizing donations to political parties in the first place.
     
    "Our main position is to get rid of the subsidy," Wudrick says.
     
    "If parties had to work harder for their money and/or had less of it, they wouldn't want longer writ periods. They'd be far more careful with their resources."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    CP officially asks to appeal $430-million Lac-Megantic settlement fund for victims

    CP officially asks to appeal $430-million Lac-Megantic settlement fund for victims
    MONTREAL — The $430-million settlement fund in the Lac-Megantic train disaster is illegal because the Quebec judge who approved it did not have the authority to do so, Canadian Pacific Railway said in its official leave for appeal Monday.

    CP officially asks to appeal $430-million Lac-Megantic settlement fund for victims

    20-Year-Old Man Known To Police Shot And Killed In Vancouver

    20-Year-Old Man Known To Police Shot And Killed In Vancouver
    Police say they received several 911 calls just before 9 p.m. reporting the sound of gunfire in East Vancouver

    20-Year-Old Man Known To Police Shot And Killed In Vancouver

    15-Year-Old Jason Nguyen Found Dead In Home Victim Of Homicide: Vancouver Police

    15-Year-Old Jason Nguyen Found Dead In Home Victim Of Homicide: Vancouver Police
    High school student Jason Nguyen was discovered in his home by a family member just before 3 p.m. on Sunday.

    15-Year-Old Jason Nguyen Found Dead In Home Victim Of Homicide: Vancouver Police

    Suspicious Death Of Teen In Vancouver, Targeted Shooting Injures Man In Surrey

    Suspicious Death Of Teen In Vancouver, Targeted Shooting Injures Man In Surrey
    Surrey RCMP say a man is being treated in hospital after being found in the Port Kells neighbourhood, just after midnight, suffering from multiple gunshot wounds.

    Suspicious Death Of Teen In Vancouver, Targeted Shooting Injures Man In Surrey

    Three Separate Crashes Along Coquihalla Highway Send 13 To Hospital

    BC Ambulance Service responded to a trio of crashes within a two-hour period on Sunday, all of which took place a couple dozen kilometres south of Kamloops, B.C.

    Three Separate Crashes Along Coquihalla Highway Send 13 To Hospital

    B.C. Vacuum-Cleaner Company Penalized For Pressuring Seniors To Buy

    B.C. Vacuum-Cleaner Company Penalized For Pressuring Seniors To Buy
    VICTORIA — The watchdog for British Columbia's consumers has penalized a door-to-door vacuum-cleaner and air-filtration company for taking advantage of seniors.

    B.C. Vacuum-Cleaner Company Penalized For Pressuring Seniors To Buy