sa国际传媒

Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Les Leyne: Now it鈥檚 NDP鈥檚 turn in the hot seat

It turns out the sa国际传媒 Liberals aren鈥檛 the only ones who ran into trouble with dubious ethnic-outreach schemes. After feasting on scandalous revelations about the sa国际传媒

It turns out the sa国际传媒 Liberals aren鈥檛 the only ones who ran into trouble with dubious ethnic-outreach schemes.

After feasting on scandalous revelations about the sa国际传媒 Liberals鈥 plan to use government for political purposes, the New Democrats got some blowback on Tuesday.

Documents from an increasingly leaky legislature show the NDP caucus siphoned money out of every MLAs鈥 constituency account to fund a standing contract for a Chinese-Canadian adviser who helps them reach Asian voters.

And auditor general John Doyle roasted them for the practice in a secret draft report several years ago.

Doyle, as part of his scorching report on slipshod legislature accounting, took a hard look at the NDP caucus budget. He identified measures that disguised the fact the caucus ran over budget for at least two years.

鈥淣DP caucus expenses were reported as being within budget for fiscal 2008 and 2009, when they actually were over budget,鈥 Doyle said.

The amounts weren鈥檛 significant, but he said the entries resulted in a 鈥渕aterial misstatement鈥 of the legislature鈥檚 financial records, which would have misled readers.

They also developed the practice of dinging each NDP MLA about $200 a month from their constituency office budget and creating a centralized fund, starting in 2005.

The stated purpose was 鈥渢o collectively and efficiently respond to common constituency needs.鈥

But Doyle said there was a significant risk that the funds were not being used for purposes consistent with the purpose of the constituency allowance.

He said the money 鈥渨as being used for partisan purposes and not for goods or services consistent with the original purpose of the constituency office allowance.鈥

If using resources improperly for partisan purposes sounds familiar, it鈥檚 because that鈥檚 what the NDP has been accusing the government of doing.

The issue eventually reached the legislative assembly management committee, where yet another leaked document shows the fund grew to $459,790 by 2011.

And most of the money was used to contract Gabriel Yiu鈥檚 services for the NDP caucus.

Yiu is a media personality and political consultant who has run twice for the NDP and is running again.

Liberals suggest he is more or less a professional NDP candidate, retained with money that was supposed to be spent in the NDP constituencies. He disengages at election time, but over the past several years has been paid by the NDP to help connect with Asian voters.

The NDP had a ready answer to the questions raised 鈥 it was all approved by the legislature鈥檚 accounting office.

Under the insipid financial controls that were in place at the time, all they needed was the comptroller鈥檚 approval, which they obtained.

That was hardly enough for the Liberals, who relished the chance to throw the issue back in the faces of the Opposition.

Cabinet minister Bill Bennett said: 鈥淚鈥檓 the MLA for Kootenay East. If my party called me up and said: 鈥楤ill, you鈥檙e going to send us $200 every month ... and we鈥檙e going to use it however we want to use it ...鈥 I would tell them to take a flying leap.

鈥淭o me that鈥檚 the worst thing about this. They鈥檝e actually taken money that was supposed to be used for the benefit of people who live out there in these constituencies.鈥

NDP caucus chair Shane Simpson said, despite Doyle鈥檚 findings, it was all open and above-board, approved by the MLAs each year and carried on the legislature鈥檚 books.

The moves that hid the deficits were just one-day transfers to cover some benefit costs, also approved by the comptroller, Simpson said.

There are two other aspects of the story that come down on either side of the issue. The first is that Doyle didn鈥檛 include his criticisms in the report released last year. They were in 鈥渕anagement letters鈥 that circulated internally. At one point he was labelling it 鈥渇raud,鈥 but was talked out of that finding by NDP caucus officials. That tends to downplay the findings. (He has an update on the legislature accounting to be released today.)

The second is that, for all the defences offered Tuesday, the NDP caucus emptied the fund last year and returned a significant balance to the MLAs鈥 constituency accounts. If it鈥檚 all open and above-board, why did they wind it up?

Simpson said it has just been suspended, and a new caucus could resurrect the idea.

Given the fuss created by its discovery, that鈥檚 highly unlikely.