Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

Mining Magnate Peter Munk Admits To Donating More Than Legal Limit To Conservatives

The Canadian Press, 01 Jan, 2016 02:33 PM
    OTTAWA — Mining magnate and philanthropist Peter Munk has admitted he donated more than the legal limit to the Conservative party three different times.
     
    Munk, the founder of mining giant Barrick Gold Corp., signed a compliance agreement with Elections Canada earlier this month, acknowledging that in 2008, 2010 and 2012 his donations exceeded the maximum allowable contributions in those years.
     
    In total, he donated $2,950 more than the law allowed to riding associations in Ontario and Quebec represented by Conservative cabinet ministers as well as to a Conservative candidate's campaign in Toronto.
     
    While breaking election donation limits could lead to criminal charges, Munk will not be charged because he voluntarily signed the compliance agreement.
     
    "The over-contributions were unintentional and Mr. Munk has acknowledged the oversight," said Andy Lloyd, a spokesperson for Munk, in an email to The Canadian Press. 
     
    "He has engaged with Elections Canada to reach a compliance agreement that provides full transparency for these contributions."
     
    Munk started his gold mining company in the 1980s and built it to become one of the largest firms in the world. He has also given away hundreds of millions of dollars to charitable causes in Canada and around the world. The 88-year-old stepped down from his role as company chairman in 2014.
     
    In 2015, the company hired former Conservative foreign affairs minister John Baird as an international adviser.
     
    A review of financial reports on the Elections Canada website shows Munk appears to have been making political donations since 2004, mostly to the Conservatives.
     
    According to the compliance agreement, in 2008, he contributed a total of $2,100 when the limit for individual donations that year was $1,100. 
     
    Among the donations was $1,000 to the electoral district association in Whitby-Oshawa, which at the time was a riding held by former Conservative finance minister Jim Flaherty.
     
    Another $550 donation went to the Conservative association in Eglinton-Lawrence, where that year Joe Oliver tried and failed to win the riding for the Conservatives.
     
    A third donation of $550 went to the campaign of Heather Jewell, who was running for the Conservatives in the longtime Liberal stronghold of St. Paul's. She lost. 
     
    In 2010, Munk contributed a total of $1,850, exceeding donation limits by $750. He gave $1,100 to the Conservative association in Beauce, a Quebec riding held by Conservative Maxime Bernier, and another $750 to the riding association in Eglinton-Lawrence.
     
    Oliver would go on to win that riding in 2011, and then became the minister of natural resources. He replaced Flaherty as finance minister in 2014.
     
    In 2012, Munk contributed a total of $2,400, exceeding that year's individual limit by $1,200. Half the money went to Beauce, where Bernier was still the MP and at that point a cabinet minister, and half to the St. Paul's riding association.
     
    Munk signed the agreement on Dec. 8. By doing so, he agrees to comply with electoral law in the future and in turn, the Commissioner of Canada Elections will not refer the matter for prosecution.
     
    The agreement was published online Thursday by the Commissioner of Canada Elections.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    How Time Flies! Facebook Mistakenly Congratulates Users On 46 Years Of Online Friendship

    The social network sent automated messages Thursday inviting some users to celebrate "46 years of friendship on Facebook" with one or more of their online friends.

    How Time Flies! Facebook Mistakenly Congratulates Users On 46 Years Of Online Friendship

    Man Arrested After Alleged Disturbance On Toronto-Bound Air Canada Flight

    Man Arrested After Alleged Disturbance On Toronto-Bound Air Canada Flight
    Peel Regional Police say they took a man into custody after his plane landed at Toronto's Pearson International Airport early Thursday morning.

    Man Arrested After Alleged Disturbance On Toronto-Bound Air Canada Flight

    TSB Reminds Air Passengers To Wear Seatbelts After 21 People Hurt In Turbulence

    TSB Reminds Air Passengers To Wear Seatbelts After 21 People Hurt In Turbulence
    The agency posted the warning on Twitter Thursday and followed it up with another tweet linked to a report about 16 passengers and crew being injured on an Air Canada flight in 2011.

    TSB Reminds Air Passengers To Wear Seatbelts After 21 People Hurt In Turbulence

    Charges Laid In B.C. Highway Crash That Saw Passengers Ejected From Vehicle

    Charges Laid In B.C. Highway Crash That Saw Passengers Ejected From Vehicle
    Charges have been laid against a 47-year-old California man arising out of an accident on a British Columbia highway that injured several passengers.

    Charges Laid In B.C. Highway Crash That Saw Passengers Ejected From Vehicle

    Five Arrested, Burglary Ring Busted, Thanks To Vigilant Nanaimo Neighbour

    Five Arrested, Burglary Ring Busted, Thanks To Vigilant Nanaimo Neighbour
    An early morning call from the neighbour on Dec. 29 alerted RCMP that two people were loading furniture into a van outside a home, but by the time officers arrived, the van was gone.

    Five Arrested, Burglary Ring Busted, Thanks To Vigilant Nanaimo Neighbour

    Support Overwhelming For B.C. Couple Mauled By Dogs At Fort St. John Home On Christmas

    Support Overwhelming For B.C. Couple Mauled By Dogs At Fort St. John Home On Christmas
    Robin Elgie, who is 66, remains in intensive care in an Edmonton hospital after the Christmas Day attack that mangled both arms in Fort St. John.

    Support Overwhelming For B.C. Couple Mauled By Dogs At Fort St. John Home On Christmas