Close X
Saturday, January 25, 2025
ADVT 
National

NDP Ended 2018 With Nearly $4.5 Million In Negative Net Assets, Return Shows

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Sep, 2019 08:48 PM

    OTTAWA - The federal New Democrats ended last year by going deeper into the red.

     

    The party's annual return posted to the Elections Canada website shows the party finished 2018 with about $4.7 million in assets and $9.2 million in total liabilities, meaning they ended the year with $4.5 million in negative net assets.

     

    That makes the third year in the row the party has filed an annual financial return where total assets were less than overall liabilities.

     

    The NDP ended 2017 with about $3.1 million in negative net assets.

     

    It is also the worst balance sheet since 2001, which is the earliest year for which the reports are available online.

     

    The Conservatives ended 2018 with $5.1 million in net assets and the Liberals had $1.7 million.

     

    The return shows the NDP spent about $1.4 million more than it had coming in last year, an operating deficit that is about the same as it was in 2017.

     

    The cash-strapped status of the NDP comes alongside questions about the party's ability to recruit candidates to run for office in the Oct. 21 election.

     

    NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh said Friday in Quebec City that he expects to have candidates in 302 of 338 ridings in place within the week.

     

    Melanie Richer, a spokeswoman for the NDP, said the balance sheet does not take the appraised value of the Jack Layton Building in downtown Ottawa, which the party owns and houses its headquarters.

     

    The filing shows the building and the land it stands on had an appraised value of nearly $7.9 million as of March 2018.

     

    "If Elections Canada operated like any accounting firm, that would be reflected in the net asset amount," Richer said in a statement.

     

    Richer also noted donations were up last year, a trend she said continued into the first half of 2019.

     

    The annual financial return shows the NDP received about $5.2 million from supporters in 2018, which is about $80,000 more than the year before.

     

    "We've been consistently beating our projections since the beginning of the year," said Richer.

     

    The NDP received about $2.66 million in contributions from Jan. 1 to June 30 this year.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Cultus Lake Man Ian Gerald Mountain Wanted By Aggasiz RCMP

    Mounties in Aggasiz are warning the public that a B.C.-wide warrant of arrest has been issued for a Cultus Lake man.

    Cultus Lake Man Ian Gerald Mountain Wanted By Aggasiz RCMP

    'From Where I Stand': Jody Wilson-Raybould To Release Book This Fall

    VANCOUVER - A book by former justice minister and attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould will be released on Sept. 20, according to her publisher.

    'From Where I Stand': Jody Wilson-Raybould To Release Book This Fall

    One Man Critically Hurt, Another Arrested After Stabbing On Richmond, B.C., Bus

    One Man Critically Hurt, Another Arrested After Stabbing On Richmond, B.C., Bus
    A 42-year-old man has potentially life-threatening stab wounds after a fight on a bus in Richmond, B.C.

    One Man Critically Hurt, Another Arrested After Stabbing On Richmond, B.C., Bus

    Two Teens Thought To Be Missing Now Suspects In Three Northern B.C. Deaths

    SURREY, B.C. - A nationwide manhunt was on Tuesday for two teenagers labelled by police as suspects in the deaths of three people in northern British Columbia.

    Two Teens Thought To Be Missing Now Suspects In Three Northern B.C. Deaths

    Canada Invests $85M Into Advanced Satellites To Connect Rural, Remote Regions

    The funding is to help Ottawa-based Telesat develop a group of co-ordinated satellites — also known as a constellation — in low Earth orbit.

    Canada Invests $85M Into Advanced Satellites To Connect Rural, Remote Regions

    B.C. Coroner's Jury Wants More High-Tech Equipment For Emergency Response Police

    B.C. Coroner's Jury Wants More High-Tech Equipment For Emergency Response Police
    A British Columbia coroner's jury has recommended that there be more officers on the north district emergency response team and that they be better equipped after a police shooting death of a man five years ago.

    B.C. Coroner's Jury Wants More High-Tech Equipment For Emergency Response Police