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Big spending by winners, losers in Metro 91原创's 2022 municipal elections

Just who spent what during the last B.C. municipal elections?
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91原创 Mayor Ken Sim

Mayor Ken Sim and his ABC 91原创 party raised more than $1.9 million in donations to dominate the 2022 91原创 civic election, according to campaign finance returns released Thursday by Elections BC.

ABC reported $1,008,688 in donations and $414,003 in other income and transfers received, for a total $1,422,691. The party said it spent $800,077 of that to defeat mayor Kennedy Stewart and win majority control of both city council and park board on Oct. 15.

Its biggest advertising expenditure was $100,652 for radio ads, a sum dwarfed by the $321,614 on unspecified “professional services.”

On a separate disclosure, Sim reported raising $915,745 in income from 2019 to 2022 and spent $180,685 of that. He fell $50,000 under his individual expense limit for the 2022 election.

However, elsewhere in that report, Sim disclosed $302,500 in transfers given to ABC in 2021 and 2022 and $432,560 in expenses racked-up between 2019 and 2021.

Of the latter category, Sim paid out $204,828 for research and data, including election surveys and polls, $87,275.63 in salaries and benefits, $58,756 in professional services, $24,596 for website displays and $9,470 for social media.

Donors who gave ABC the maximum-per-individual $1,250 donation in 2022 included: Lululemon founder and Low Tide Properties owner Chip Wilson, as well as his wife and three sons; Bonnis Properties’ Kerry and Zohra Bonnis; Polygon’s Michael Audain and Neil Chrystal; Reliance Properties’ Jon Stovell; Hallmark Farms' Clifford Pollon and four family members; Canaccord Financial founder Peter Brown; Royal 91原创 Realty’s Sing Yim Leo and David Choi; CTG Brands’ Johnny Fong; Phantom Creek winery’s Richter Jiping Bai; seven members of the Onni Properties and Amacon Developments’ De Cotiis family; Army and Navy heiress Jacqui Cohen; Shato Holdings’ Peter Toigo; Townline Homes’ Rick Ilich; Westbank Developments’ Ian Gillespie; and lobbyist Mark Jiles.

Peter Armstrong, who recruited Sim into politics with the NPA in 2018, gave ABC $1,200 in 2022.

Meanwhile, the Forward Together with Kennedy Stewart party reported $618,082 income and almost $1.1 million in expenses. Stewart’s party fell short of the $783,000 fundraising goal that was contained on a spreadsheet found by a Georgia Straight contributor early last September.

Stewart and each of his six candidates for city council, who were all shut out, reported $93,930 each in expenses.

Stewart’s biggest fundraising event was April 25, 2022 at Rogers Arena, where 54 individuals paid $1,250 each (and where Stewart’s campaign grossed $60,100). Luigi Aquilini, patriarch of the family that owns the arena and the 91原创 Canucks, as well as eight other Aquilinis donated the maximum to Stewart’s re-election drive before the event.

Meanwhile, in Surrey, a record amount was raised and spent in the province’s most-competitive race, as four high-profile candidates chased former mayor Doug McCallum and his Safe Surrey Coalition.

In total, the five campaigns reported $2.375 million income and $2.47 million in expenses.

New Mayor Brenda Locke’s Surrey 91原创 party had the most-frugal organization: she spent $278,076 to move from a city council seat to the mayor’s chair after raising $289,449.

Locke narrowly defeated McCallum and his Safe Surrey Coalition, which raised $566,729 but spent $691,956.

Surrey-Newton Liberal MP Sukh Dhaliwal’s United Surrey was one of the late challengers, but he reported a whopping $637,643 income and $653,548 in expenses.

Surrey-Panorama NDP MLA Jinny Sims also started late, but her Surrey Forward party managed to bring in $515,954 and spend $513,019.

Former White Rock mayor, federal Liberal MP and BC Liberal MLA Gordie Hogg ran under the Surrey First banner in a bid to make a comeback. The Hogg-led Surrey First party had $377,453 in income and $322,972 in expenses.