N.B. Liberals, Greens would ban out-of-province party fundraising
PCs say Susan Holt’s Liberals have more money from outside New Brunswick than they did
The leaders of the Liberal and Green parties are both promising to ban out-of-province donations to New Brunswick political parties.
Susan Holt and David Coon made the commitment in response to a Progressive Conservative Party fundraising trip this week by Premier Blaine Higgs to British Columbia and Alberta.
Most provinces don't allow political parties to raise money from non-residents.
"Yeah, we'd get rid of it. It's only common sense," Coon said.
Holt said the practice is "uncomfortable and distasteful" and she would figure out how to outlaw it if she wins this year's election — a new position she adopted after first telling the newspaper L'Acadie Nouvelle a day earlier that she couldn't commit to a ban.
She said Thursday she has since heard from many party members and New Brunswickers who want the practice eliminated.
PC campaign manager Steve Outhouse posted a photo on social media Tuesday showing N.B. Premier Blaine Higgs speaking to a crowd of people in a large room in Abbotsford, B.C. (Steve Outhouse/X)
Holt's switch also came as Progressive Conservatives accused the Liberals and others of criticizing something that Holt and her party had engaged in.
"The online outrage appears to be about stopping Conservative fundraising, rather than standing up for any actual principle," PC campaign manager Steve Outhouse said in a social media post.
Premier Blaine Higgs attended events in Abbotsford, B.C., and Calgary this week. There were no tickets sold, but the party suggested invitees make donations.
Progressive Conservatives pointed out Thursday that out-of-province donations to the Liberals in 2022 — the last full year for which figures are available — were a larger share of net contributions than they were for the PCs.
According to public records, Holt also raised almost six times as much money from outside New Brunswick for her 2022 Liberal leadership campaign as Higgs did for his 2016 PC bid.
Higgs has another fundraiser scheduled for Toronto next month, a $1,000-per-ticket dinner and reception at the city's Albany Club. (Ed Hunter/CBC)
Public records show Holt collected $15,918.54 in out-of-province donations of $100 or more when she ran for the leadership, compared to just $2,700 collected by Higgs.
Donors who give less than $100 aren't identified on financial returns filed with Elections New Brunswick.
But out-of-province donations of $100 or more represented 15.9 per cent of Holt's and 5.2 per cent of Higgs's.
When Higgs ran for the PC leadership, donations from corporations were still allowed.
His only out-of-province corporate donation was $2,000 from the Toronto Dominion Bank.
Even with that included, Holt still collected more out-of-province money than Higgs.
Holt's donors included one from outside Canada: Tim Coates, a former Fredericton entrepreneur now working for a technology company in the New York City area.
The Liberal leader said Thursday that Coates was a personal acquaintance that she once babysat and later worked with, and that other out-of-province donors included a sibling and a cousin.
According to public records, Liberal Leader Susan Holt raised almost six times as much money from outside New Brunswick for her 2022 Liberal leadership campaign as Higgs did for his 2016 PC bid. (CBC)
The list also included John Bragg, president of Nova Scotia-based Oxford Frozen Foods, who gave Holt $1,000, and businessman Scott McCain, a Toronto resident and chairman of New Brunswick-based McCain Foods Ltd.
He gave $3,000 to Holt, the maximum allowable. He gave $1,500 to Higgs's leadership campaign in 2016.
His mother Margaret McCain, who lives in Toronto, also donated $3,000 to Holt's campaign.
Holt said there is a difference between "passively" receiving donations and actively leaving the province to ask for them, but she would look at how to outlaw both.
"In general, I think going out of province and engaging with interest groups to fill your political coffers is uncomfortable and distasteful," she said.
"It begs the question: Who is buying influence in New Brunswick decision-making and why is it not New Brunswickers?"
Coon said the existing law is likely aimed at allowing people originally from New Brunswick to contribute.
He added that it will be unfair to smaller parties if the two big mainstream parties take advantage of it to use their resources to travel the country holding events.
A ban is the best way to "create a level playing field and ensure that no party is going to go off and try to raise huge amounts of money from elsewhere in Canada," he said.
"Not that that's happened yet, but certainly the premier's forays into Alberta and British Columbia and his plans in Toronto suggest that's a concerted effort this year."
A ban is the best way to 'create a level playing field and ensure that no party is going to go off and try to raise huge amounts of money from elsewhere in Canada,' says Green Leader David Coon. (Jacques Poitras/CBC)
Higgs has another fundraiser scheduled for Toronto next month, a $1,000-per-ticket dinner and reception at the city's Albany Club.
The PC party began promoting Higgs to Conservatives across Canada last fall, creating a "Help Higgs Win" website that promoted his policy positions and described this year's New Brunswick election as a campaign of national importance.
In 2016, the PCs, in opposition at the time, complained about then-Liberal Premier Brian Gallant holding fundraisers in Vancouver and Calgary.
The criticism was because Gallant held the events during trips to the two cities on government business and at taxpayers' expense.
The PC Party paid for Higgs's travel to British Columbia and Alberta this week.
"We will continue to abide by all rules," Outhouse said in a post on the social media site X.
In 2016 the New Brunswick Liberals held a fundraiser in Fredericton that featured Gallant, two other Atlantic Liberal premiers and several federal Liberal cabinet ministers visiting the city for government meetings.
"If we want to give access to business stakeholders and whatnot to advance their projects, their causes, hey, rightfully so," then-cabinet minister Donald Arseneault said at the time.
Methinks Higgy is taking somebody's advice N'esy Pas?
''In fact, the subtle jockeying for recognition among some of his key cabinet ministers was already under way last week in anticipation of McKenna's eventual departure from the premier's chair. "The preparation time could be long or medium term," the 48-year-old premier told Maclean's last week. "
Why is it I am not surprised?
Actually their main hiring hall is The RCMP retirement Association .There they are contracted out to provincial and federal dept. That is if you mean the xrcmp officers .
Most Nbers wouldn't be so upset with Higgs about his fundraising efforts if he wasn't already ignoring the issues at home like healthcare, homelessness and education, etc. NBers are angry with this govt and are standing up and lashing out.
Bobby Richards
Reply to Bobby Richards
I would vote PC in 2024 if they had a half decent leader.....unlike Higgs.
Ronald Miller
Reply to Bobby Richards
I wonder how many people could not find their way home from work last night because Higgs was out of province. Had he been here, all our problems would be fixed in 3 days.
Bobby Richards
Reply to Ronald Miller.
Nope. People expect a leader........not a fixer of everything. A premier that actually tries. You know...... somebody that actually cares about someone other than themselves. But he'll always have a few blind sheep like yourself to vote for him.
Frank Wentworth
Reply to Ronald Miller.
Probably just you. Everyone else made it home fine.
Ralph Skavinsky
Reply to Bobby Richards
Oh I so long for the days when Gallant and Graham were at the helm with Senior Advisor Ms Holt offering sage advice on Les Jeux de Francophone along with Atcon...all that transparency!!
Dave Jones
Reply to Ralph Skavinsky
Yes and I am still trying to get my file of language complaints that I made back then . All the complaints were about the court and the prosecutors .
David Webb
Reply to Bobby Richards
Did you miss the article that even the premier of Quebec is asking the PM to stop causing these issues? Your comments suggest that you and many are placing the issue onto the wrong government.
Ralph Skavinsky
Reply to Dave Jones
Do you have a phone number for your MLA..so many people and you might be one who likes to complain but never actually acts..do it!! Right way!
David Amos
Reply to Dave Jones
Do tell
Dave Jones
Reply to Ralph Skavinsky
Oh thank you ,Maybe the MLA will do something considering the commissioner of Language did not ,nor human rights ,nor the attorney generals office ,The NDP national stated it was to big for them after only looking at 2 documents ,but of course times change .and thank you
Dave Jones
Reply to David Amos
Oh I think that you will know some of those involved . The translator refused to translate the verbal statements of the DFO senior science advisor and then left .This witness was one of the two complainant's representing the federal government on file according to the judge. I was also refused the written translation of both the DFO complainants written statements . This is only a little of the language complaints that I made during the judicial procedure and after .
Dave Jones
Reply to Dave Jones
i hold a written agreement to do what I was doing in science . agreed to by a special committee of the Government of Canada and the Government of New Brunswick
Dave Jones
Reply to Dave Jones
What happened during the charter challenges should be in legal history instead of being buried .
Dave Jones
Reply to Dave Jones
Or I should say the Corporation of Canada and the Corporation of New Brunswick
Dave Jones
Reply to Ralph Skavinsky
I should add that I contacted my MP as well and he would not even talk to me . maybe that is because his wife was my Judge . Musta been some kinda conflict maybe lol .
How many times were you successful ? not trying to be nasty but I think we know that money can make a big difference
June 18, 2004
The Unconventional Candidate
David Amos Isn’t Campaigning For Your Vote, But….
By Gisele McKnight
FUNDY—He has a pack of cigarettes in his shirt pocket, a chain on his wallet, a beard at least a foot long, 60 motorcycles and a cell phone that rings to the tune of "Yankee Doodle."
Meet the latest addition to the Fundy ballot—David Amos.
The independent candidate lives in Milton, Massachusetts with his wife and two children, but his place of residence does not stop him from running for office in Canada.
One has only to be at least 18, a Canadian citizen and not be in jail to meet Elections Canada requirements.
When it came time to launch his political crusade, Amos chose his favourite place to do so—Fundy.
Amos, 52, is running for political office because of his dissatisfaction with politicians.
"I’ve become aware of much corruption involving our two countries," he said. "The only way to fix corruption is in the political forum."
The journey that eventually led Amos to politics began in Sussex in 1987. He woke up one morning disillusioned with life and decided he needed to change his life.
"I lost my faith in mankind," he said. "People go through that sometimes in midlife."
So Amos, who’d lived in Sussex since 1973, closed his Four Corners motorcycle shop, paid his bills and hit the road with Annie, his 1952 Panhead motorcycle.
"Annie and I rode around for awhile (three years, to be exact) experiencing the milk of human kindness," he said. "This is how you renew your faith in mankind – you help anyone you can, you never ask for anything, but you take what they offer."
For those three years, they offered food, a place to sleep, odd jobs and conversation all over North America.
Since he and Annie stopped wandering, he has married, fathered a son and a daughter and become a house-husband – Mr. Mom, as he calls himself.
He also describes himself in far more colourful terms—a motorcyclist rather than a biker, a "fun-loving, free-thinking, pig-headed individual," a "pissed-off Maritimer" rather than an activist, a proud Canadian and a "wild colonial boy."
Ironically, the man who is running for office has never voted in his life.
"But I have no right to criticize unless I offer my name," he said. "It’s alright to bitch in the kitchen, but can you walk the walk?"
Amos has no intention of actively campaigning.
"I didn’t appreciate it when they (politicians) pounded on my door interrupting my dinner," he said. "If people are interested, they can call me. I’m not going to drive my opinions down their throats."
And he has no campaign budget, nor does he want one.
"I won’t take any donations," he said. "Just try to give me some. It’s not about money. It goes against what I’m fighting about."
What he’s fighting for is the discussion of issues – tainted blood, the exploitation of the Maritimes’ gas and oil reserves and NAFTA, to name a few.
"The political issues in the Maritimes involve the three Fs – fishing, farming and forestry, but they forget foreign issues," he said. "I’m death on NAFTA, the back room deals and free trade. I say chuck it (NAFTA) out the window.
NAFTA is the North American Free Trade Agreement which allows an easier flow of goods between Canada, the United States and Mexico.
Amos disagrees with the idea that a vote for him is a wasted vote.
"There are no wasted votes," he said. "I want people like me, especially young people, to pay attention and exercise their right. Don’t necessarily vote for me, but vote."
Although…if you’re going to vote anyway, Amos would be happy to have your X by his name.
"I want people to go into that voting booth, see my name, laugh and say, ‘what the hell.’"
Actually their main hiring hall is The RCMP retirement Association .There they are contracted out to provincial and federal dept. That is if you mean the xrcmp officers .
They are also contracted to large corporations , if it is still in effect some are sent thru the corporate enhancement deal that was brought into the public during the oil problems in Alberta years ago
I did my own research, and found essentially the same as posted by MR Cain.
another nothing burger from Poitras. The headline should read "Opposition party throwing stones from glass house". The outrage over this is hilarious, 4/5 of the article about the PCs contributions coming form out of province, and a small blurb about the liberals out of province donations being much more than the cons, yet the cons doing it is bad. This reporters political bias is so obvious its almost laughable, if not for the fact the media is supposed to be unbiased.
Dave Jones
Reply to Andrew Martin
Yup
David Amos
Reply to Andrew Martin
Ditto
MR Cain
Reply to Andrew Martin
The article reports on all parties; where is the bias?
Andrew Martin
Reply to MR Cain
i clearly explained the bias in plain english my original comment.
MR Cain
Reply to Andrew Martin
So did I. All parties have been reported on. Just because everybody wants to see the PC party in New Brunswick gone should not be reason to think of bias.
Andrew Martin
Reply to MR Cain
There's your bias again, everybody likely doesn't want them gone. The last election showed the majority wanted them. Until an election happens, no one knows how many people want to see them gone. Just because everyone in your circle thinks like you, doesn't mean everyone in the province does. The comments section here is proof enough that your assumption is incorrect about "everyone".
Also, you didn't explain anything, nor did i ask you to. All parties are mentioned in the article, which i also acknowledged. The language and wording are biased in the article, and you fail to see that because your bias is in alignment with the author. You, and others like you are so outrage by the policy 713 update that your hate clouds your judgement.
MR Cain
Reply to Andrew Martin
713 is just one Higgs blunder of many others. If you can find an unbiased media, let us know.
Don Corey
Reply to Andrew Martin
Well put.
Reply to Jake Newman
Quid pro quo: yes or no ...
David Amos
Reply to Wilbur Ross
Yes
Wilbur Ross
Reply to David Amos.
The new election slogan for the Tories, rumour has it.
David Amos
Reply to Wilbur Ross
Surely you jest
JP is sure trying hard for the Libs.
Wilbur Ross
Reply to Terry Bull
JP?
G. Timothy Walton
Reply to Terry Bull
How dare he point out how much worse Higgs is. Neutrality does not mean only pointing out the same number of negatives for each if one side has many more of them.
It's not like Holt is particulary interesting to read about.
David Amos
Reply to Wilbur Ross
You know who
Andrew Martin
Reply to G. Timothy Walton
when you write an article condemning one political parties actions, yet another party is a worse offender, but focus on the lesser offender, that not neutrality, thats bias.
MR Cain
Reply to Terry Bull
Higgs is making it easy. A blunder whenever he opens his mouth.
MR Cain
Reply to Andrew Martin
Higgs is in the cross hairs because he is the problem. The next government will get the same.
G. Timothy Walton
Reply to Andrew Martin
When one party is doing it in a high-profile manner, and it's in government, guess who gets noticed.
Andrew Martin
Reply to MR Cain
your opinion does not equate fact. If it was the liberals in power there would be plenty of articles explaining how the billion dollar surplus is a good thing and all the positives about it and how the health care system was a problem that the previous con government failed to solve and thats why the system is in collapse under liberal control. And how other external factors affect things here. Im no con, nor am i liberal, if the bias isn't obvious then people lack the ability to view things from an alternative perspective.
Andrew Martin
Reply to G. Timothy Walton
a high profile manner? you mean highlighted by the biased media? They're both guilty of doing the same thing, yet the "media" is focusing on higgs, end of discussion.
G. Timothy Walton
Reply to Andrew Martin
If the only argument you have is that it's biased to notice what your party is doing when they're the ones drawing attention to themselves, you've lost the argument.
All the parties together probably took in fewer out-of-province donations in 2023 than this one trip did for Higgs.
Andrew Martin
Reply to G. Timothy Walton
Your bias is beginning to show. The media is the ones drawing attention to it. Now you gripe that higgs may have gathered more out of province donations than holt in 2023, but fail to mention or care, as the article does, that holt gathered 6 times move than higgs had previously, and you seem to be fine with that. I'm advocating for equal action and treatment, youre advocating higgs bad, others good.
MR Cain
Reply to Andrew Martin
Fact is, Canadians have always benefited the most from a Liberal government. The Conservative austerity program just keeps us poor. Invest in people and the returns are enormous.
Dave Jones
Reply to MR Cain
Ha ha ha That is funny
G. Timothy Walton
Reply to Andrew Martin
You're the one saying it's a sign of bias for the media to mention Higgs's fundraising without treating something years ago as being just as timely.
None of them should be allowed to make a dime outside the province, but somehow it's only bad (to you) to mention it because the Opposition did it in the past and their actions aren't being put to the same scrutiny as what the sitting premier is doing now.
Bias much?
MR Cain
Reply to Dave Jones
This fact has given you the benefit of laughter.
Dave Jones
Reply to MR Cain
Actually it is your fact finding. This I find very funny but then I have learned that some get confused with their own perception of what the fact is .
MR Cain
Reply to Dave Jones
You obviously did not even make an effort to check it out. Let your finger do some walking; find out the truth on your own.
Ralph Skavinsky
Reply to MR Cain
Actually weve done better when the NDP worked for us...try Medicare...how about the new dental plan...as examples..
MR Cain
Reply to Ralph Skavinsky
Medicare was implemented by a Liberal government, as well as a whole bunch of stuff, if one actually searches.
MR Cain
Reply to Ralph Skavinsky
BTW NDP never existed at the time either.
MR Cain
Reply to MR Cain
Correction. Tommy Douglas of CCF in Saskatchewan as province, and Pearson of the feds a couple years after.
MR Cain
Reply to MR Cain
My apology. NDP did exist in 1961.
David Amos
Reply to Dave Jones
Trust that this is all too too funny to me
macleans
McKenna Re-elected
Article by John Demont
Published Online March 17, 2003
This article was originally published in Maclean's Magazine on September 25, 1995
McKenna Re-elected
It was 11:30 on the morning after the New Brunswick Liberal party's third consecutive election landslide, but Frank McKenna was still celebrating - his way. Operating on just 4½ hours of sleep, he had followed his usual morning ritual: after waking at six a.m., he took a 20-minute walk along the Saint John River and was eating breakfast at his desk at the New Brunswick legislature in Fredericton by seven. Since then, he had done media interviews, discussed new business opportunities with aides, and dug into the foot-deep stack of files on his desk. Finally, though, the chunky, tightly wound elder statesman of Canadian premiers felt like indulging himself a bit. And as the smoke from one of his beloved Monte Cristo Cuban cigars encircled the red balloons and streamers hanging from the office ceiling, McKenna cracked a weary smile. "I am euphoric," he said. "I feel at peace."
Well he might. At a time when public cynicism about politicians remains formidable, McKenna's restraint-minded, eight-year-old government managed the improbable - not only winning its third straight mandate but increasing its standing in the legislature by capturing 47 of 55 seats, compared with 46 in the 1991 provincial election. McKenna said he feels personally vindicated by wiping out the anti-bilingualism Confederation of Regions Party - reviled throughout francophone New Brunswick - which won eight seats in 1991 and formed the official Opposition. That privilege now falls to the Conservative party, which elected six members - including leader Bernard Valcourt - while New Democratic Party leader Elizabeth Weir will continue to hold her party's only seat in the legislature.
But the real drama will likely take place on the government benches: McKenna has repeatedly said that after a decade in office he will begin thinking about how to make the transition back to private life. In fact, the subtle jockeying for recognition among some of his key cabinet ministers was already under way last week in anticipation of McKenna's eventual departure from the premier's chair. "The preparation time could be long or medium term," the 48-year-old premier told Maclean's last week. "But the ultimate act of leadership is preparing for succession." And as the 30-day provincial election campaign amply demonstrated, McKenna seldom leaves much to chance.
Called in the dog days of summer, the campaign was the shortest in New Brunswick's history - and certainly one of the least suspenseful. The Liberals entered the race with a 30-point lead in the public opinion polls, and ended up with 51.3 per cent of the popular vote, compared with 31 per cent for the Tories, 9.8 per cent for the NDP and 7.2 per cent for COR. "Everything went according to plan," said John Bryden, the New Brunswick Senator who ran the Liberal campaign. "We saw no reason to change anything about our strategy."
That meant no extravagant campaign promises and little mixing it up in the trenches with the opposition. The Liberals simply ignored their outgunned opponents and stuck to their basic message: vote Grit because Frank McKenna is a superb leader and because the government has proved that it can deliver jobs.
The opposition parties, on the other hand, just never found their footing. The NDP seemed preoccupied with getting Weir re-elected. And COR never recovered from a series of embarrassing internal squabbles, which at one point saw three people claim the party leadership within a matter of days.
The Tories clearly gained from the collapse of COR's support. But the party's campaign, which challenged McKenna's record as premier, suffered from underfunding and poor management - and the fact that Valcourt, a feisty francophone lawyer from Edmunston who held federal cabinet posts under Brian Mulroney, failed to stir support in anglophone New Brunswick, where his party won only two seats. All the same, the election may have signalled a rebirth of sorts for the Tories, who enjoyed their best showing since Richard Hatfield's scandal-plagued government lost all 58 seats to McKenna in 1987. It may also bode well for their federal counterparts, who managed to win only one of the 31 seats in Atlantic Canada in the 1993 federal election. "We have a new beachhead in New Brunswick," declared federal Tory leader Jean Charest.
Perhaps. But for the time being, it was hard to dispute McKenna's contention last week that his party's victory represented an "overwhelmingly, absolute mandate." New Brunswickers, therefore, can expect more of the tough restraint measures that they have grown accustomed to during the past four years, which included closing 250 hospital beds and slashing about 2,400 public service jobs. At the same time, McKenna promises to be at his aggressive best in convincing new businesses to set up shop in New Brunswick - a fact underlined by an ad that appeared in Toronto newspapers three days after the election, featuring a big picture of a smiling McKenna urging business executives to "give me a call" on his 1-800-McKENNA hotline.
How much longer will he answer the call? McKenna has recently taken pains to deny an earlier pledge that he would leave provincial politics by 1997, his 10th anniversary as Liberal leader. But even at Liberal victory parties last week, speculation persisted that he will not lead the party into the next provincial election, choosing instead to enter the business world or federal politics, where he is viewed by some party activists as a potential successor to Prime Minister Jean Chrétien. As one insider put it, "After this, Frank's problem is, what can you do for an encore?"
Either way, his legacy will be considerable - innovative social programs, a vastly improved fiscal situation that this February saw his government produce its first balanced budge, and a new sense of pride among New Brunswickers. But it is on the economic front that McKenna ultimately wants to be judged. Towards the end of the election campaign, the Royal Bank of Canada predicted that New Brunswick's would be the second-strongest provincial economy in 1995-1996. And throughout the contest, the Liberals maintained that 20,000 more New Brunswickers were working now than in 1991. (The Tories claimed that the government actually created only 5,000 jobs during their last mandate.)
After the 1991 vote, McKenna says that he felt a lot of inner turmoil - ecstatic about his party's impressive victory but shaken by the emergence of COR and the defeat of a number of party stalwarts. Last week, he showed no hint of anguish standing on a stage at the victory party, dancing stiffly but enthusiastically next to his wife Julie - to whom he made the original pledge not to make a career out of politics - and daughter, Tina, a student at St. Francis Xavier University in Antigonish, N.S. Finally escaping the crowds, they headed back to the couple's white clapboard Fredericton home where McKenna called his son Jamie, a university student in Montreal and fellow political junkie, to provide a riding-by-riding breakdown of the results. Then, the premier-elect settled into an easy chair, grabbed the remote control and channel surfed until 2:30 a.m. "I missed a lot of sports scores throughout the campaign," he later explained. "I wanted to catch up."
Back in his office the next day, McKenna was still mulling over the implications of his victory. "Winning this kind of mandate means that you can't be complacent for a second," he said. "It is exhilarating but draining. I feel a huge sense of responsibility." But for all of the fretting, even McKenna - who runs every campaign as if trailing the pack - couldn't disguise the sweetness of the moment. And as he enjoyed his fragrant Monte Cristo, he looked truly serene.
Maclean's September 25, 1995
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