Close X
Monday, January 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

Tories Create Vehicle To Raise Money, Counter Left-Wing Attacks On Harper

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Jun, 2015 10:52 AM
    OTTAWA — Conservatives have formed a political action committee to counter attacks against Prime Minister Stephen Harper from progressive groups and labour unions.
     
    A group of former ministerial aides have created HarperPAC, a vehicle that allows Conservatives to raise and spend money beyond the limits and disclosure rules imposed on political parties.
     
    HarperPAC is a direct response to Engage Canada, a group of veteran Liberal and NDP strategists who have been collecting money from unions and other groups to run a concerted campaign against Harper's re-election.
     
    Engage Canada's first television ad began running earlier this month, asserting that income inequality has skyrocketed under Harper and that his Conservatives "won't be there for you."
     
    HarperPAC spokesperson Stephen Taylor says his group is needed to counter what he calls the "tide of cash from professional leftist agitators and big union bosses" aiming to take down the Harper government.
     
    Third parties such as HarperPAC and Engage Canada are not subject to any spending limits in the weeks leading up to the formal call of an election; nor do they have to disclose who gives them money or how much they spend.
     
    Once the election is called, each third party is subject to disclosure rules and can spend no more than $205,800 over the course of a 37-day campaign; of that, no more than $4,116 may be spent in an individual riding.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Simon Fraser University Embraces Bitcoin, Accepts Virtual Currency For Textbooks

    Simon Fraser University Embraces Bitcoin, Accepts Virtual Currency For Textbooks
    BURNABY, B.C. — A British Columbia university is now accepting the digital currency bitcoin at all of its bookstores, a move that staff claim is a first for Canadian post-secondary schools.

    Simon Fraser University Embraces Bitcoin, Accepts Virtual Currency For Textbooks

    North Vancouver First Nation Says Pipeline Expansion Could Increase Oil Spills

    VANCOUVER — The Tsleil-Waututh Nation in North Vancouver has released what it is calling an independent analysis of Kinder Morgan's proposed Trans Mountain pipeline expansion.

    North Vancouver First Nation Says Pipeline Expansion Could Increase Oil Spills

    From Ding-dongs To Cucumbers, B.C. Marks Decade Of Fruit And Veggies In Schools

    From Ding-dongs To Cucumbers, B.C. Marks Decade Of Fruit And Veggies In Schools
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's health minister chomps on a crunchy cucumber as he hands out fresh peppers and tomatoes to Grade 5 students who eagerly accept the healthy snacks.

    From Ding-dongs To Cucumbers, B.C. Marks Decade Of Fruit And Veggies In Schools

    Charge Laid In Case Of Speeding Quebec Cruiser That Killed Child In Another Car

    Charge Laid In Case Of Speeding Quebec Cruiser That Killed Child In Another Car
    MONTREAL — A Quebec provincial police officer is facing a charge of dangerous driving causing the death of a five-year-old boy south of Montreal in February 2014.

    Charge Laid In Case Of Speeding Quebec Cruiser That Killed Child In Another Car

    Smoke Forces Evacuation Of Air Canada Jazz Flight But Dozens Of Passengers Safe

    Smoke Forces Evacuation Of Air Canada Jazz Flight But Dozens Of Passengers Safe
    VANCOUVER — An Air Canada Express flight carrying 48 passengers has landed safely in Vancouver, despite reports of smoke in the cockpit.

    Smoke Forces Evacuation Of Air Canada Jazz Flight But Dozens Of Passengers Safe

    RCMP Conducting Montreal Raids Believed Linked To Radicalization Probe

    MONTREAL — The RCMP is conducting Montreal-area raids that are believed to be linked to a radicalization investigation.

    RCMP Conducting Montreal Raids Believed Linked To Radicalization Probe