BC Liberals fail to pass their political donations bill – Times Colonist

The spring session of the B.C. legislature ended Thursday with the Liberal government failing to pass its own bill to require more frequent reporting of political donations.

The Election Amendment Act, which was introduced Monday, died on the order paper as MLAs left town to prepare for the May9 election campaign.

It was the only piece of government legislation that failed to pass after a session dominated by questions about Liberal fundraising tactics.

Premier Christy Clark had promised the bill in response to persistent criticism of her partys cash-for-access dinners in which donors pay thousands to dine with her and her ministers.

Government house leader Mike de Jong said Thursday that the Liberals had hoped to pass the bill, but were unwilling to use a closure motion to end debate and force a vote.

It was our intention, but we werent going to impose closure, thats for sure, he said, adding: I think, generally speaking, these issues, these statutes, bills deserve to be debated.

Besides, he said the Liberals already practise what the bill would have required by releasing lists of donors every few weeks. Every party can do this if they wish to. We are.

Opponents, however, said the Liberals never had any intention of passing their bill or any of the private members bills to ban corporate and union donations.

Thats how committed they are to election finance reform, said NDP Leader John Horgan.

They were so committed that they left it until the last minute to table a bill that was dead on arrival and theyre not even going to bother to pass it. So that speaks volumes.

Green Party Leader Andrew Weaver called the Liberal bill a cynical ploy to give the appearance of taking action, while doing nothing.

It was a ploy designed solely to try to get British Columbians to believe that theyre taking steps to deal with big money, he said. Its a talking point, but there was no intention that this was ever going to pass. Frankly, the bill doesnt do anything, anyway.

Horgan said he expects fundraising to be a major issue during the campaign because voters have serious concerns about the influence of big money on provincial politics.

They see donors to the B.C. Liberal Party getting government contracts, he said. They have a problem with that. The B.C. Liberals have been doing deals with the same people that have been giving them money for the past 16 years.

But de Jong said the public is more interested in jobs and the economy than the fundraising debate that dominated the legislative session.

Actually, the economy, job prospects, thats all people are talking about, he said.

Its easy over here to become preoccupied with the discussion that takes place back and forth.

lkines@timescolonist.com

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BC Liberals fail to pass their political donations bill - Times Colonist

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