Whales have shorter gestation periods. For the third time since the Local Government Elections Task Force tabled its report, the B.C. government has been stricken with a case of cold feet.
In 2010, the task force made 31 recommendations to improve local democracy, including: setting campaign spending limits for candidates, requiring all election advertising to disclose who paid for it and requiring financial reports to be posted online through Elections B.C.
Two months after the task force tabled its report, the government said it would proceed with the recommendations in time for the 2011 elections. Those elections came and went.
Ida Chong, minister at the time, confessed that the Union of B.C. Municipalities and other groups 鈥渕ay be disappointed鈥 by the government鈥檚 inertia.
Last year, the government promised that the recommendations would be in place for the 2014 elections.
This April, then-deputy minister Don Fast went so far as to write: 鈥淭he Ministry of Community, Sport and Cultural Development is conducting the work necessary to implement the recommendations of the Local Government Elections Task Force in time for the 2014 elections.鈥
But last month, the government got cold feet. Again. Most of the recommendations might be put into law, but not all.
Notably, the government has chosen not to proceed with campaign spending limits in favour of yet more consultation, even though the task force received more than 10,000 written submissions during its 2010 review.
It seems B.C. voters need to steel themselves for another round of grossly obscene campaign spending during the 2014 local elections.
Just how gross? In the 2011 election, Vision 91原创, the NPA and COPE collectively spent $5 million. That鈥檚 roughly $12 for every eligible voter.
Contrast that with a candidate running for councillor in Montreal, who can spend all of 30 cents per voter, a candidate for mayor 38 cents. In Toronto, candidates have a limit of 85 cents per voter. In Regina, the overall limit for a mayoral candidate is $65,000 and a councillor $11,000.
And it鈥檚 not just in 91原创 where campaign spending is over the top. Had Regina鈥檚 limits been in place for the mayor鈥檚 race in Victoria adjusted on a per-voter basis, the cap on election expenses would have been $26,120. Dean Fortin spent nearly three times that getting re-elected in 2011.
If local campaign spending is obscene, it only follows that candidates need to fall back on contributors with obscenely large wallets to pay the bills. And fall back they did. In the 2011 elections, the single largest donation was $960,000, courtesy of local land developer Rob Macdonald, to 91原创鈥檚 NPA.
To put that sum into context, it鈥檚 more than double what Naheed Nenshi spent on his way to winning the mayor鈥檚 chair in Calgary in 2010. Calgary has nearly a quarter of a million more voters than 91原创.
It鈥檚 why most provinces have strict rules over who can give to a campaign and how much they can donate. In Montreal, the annual cap is $300, in Toronto $2,500, Winnipeg $750 and Calgary $5,000.
In Quebec, you can only donate to a candidate you can vote for. So if you live in Sherbrooke you can鈥檛 donate to a candidate running in Montreal. In Ontario and Manitoba, you have to live in the province to donate to a candidate.
But in B.C., a donor doesn鈥檛 even have to live in Canada to cough up as much cash as they want, resulting in the bizarre case of American corporations donating to a candidate running for city hall in the Lower Mainland.
Strangely though, the task force was opposed to setting restrictions on campaign donations, despite the fact that numerous councils and groups called for a cap on donations and a ban on corporate and union donations, positions that were supported at the time by an overwhelming majority of British Columbians.
According to a 2010 public opinion survey conducted by the Mustel Group, 74.5 per cent of respondents thought there should be a limit on how much one person can donate to a local election campaign and two-thirds supported a ban on corporate and union donations.
And now it鈥檚 time for the government to get over its chronic case of cold feet and adopt the task force鈥檚 31 recommendations. By all means consult on other issues, but expense limits isn鈥檛 one of them.
As the task force itself noted: Expense limits increase accessibility and fairness. And who could possibly oppose either?
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Dermod Travis is the executive director of IntegrityBC.