Getting politics off the dole

by Andrew Coyne on Thursday, November 27, 2008 11:09am - 258 Comments

We’ll see about the deficit later, but for now this is fantastic news:

The Conservatives are poised to eliminate the public subsidies that Canada’s five major political parties receive, a move that would save $30 million a year but could cripple the opposition.Sources told CBC News and other media outlets Wednesday that the subsidy cut is one of the key elements of the fiscal update that Finance Minister Jim Flaherty will present Thursday in Ottawa.

Parties currently receive $1.95 for every vote they receive in a federal election, provided they win at least two per cent of the nationwide popular vote. The annual subsidy is used to pay for staff and expenses.

On the surface, it would appear Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s Conservatives have the most to lose if subsidies were cut because they garnered the most votes in the October election. The Conservatives earned $10 million in subsidies, compared to $7.7 million for the Liberals, $4.9 million for the NDP, $2.6 million for the Bloc Québécois and $1.8 million for the Greens.

But because the Conservatives have such a strong fundraising base, their subsidy represents only 37 per cent of the party’s total revenues.

By comparison, the subsidy amounts to 63 per cent of the Liberals’ funding, 86 per cent of the Bloc’s, 57 per cent of the NDP’s and 65 per cent of the Greens’.

I don’t care what their motivations are: it’s the right thing to do. The public subsidy came in with the Chretien campaign finance reforms in 2003. But it was entirely contrary in spirit. The point of the restrictions on corporate and union donations was that elections should be a matter between the candidates and the voters. Corporations and unions don’t get extra votes in the ballot box, and shouldn’t get extra voice in the fund-raising contest. Nor should corporate and union leaders be able to donate other people’s money on their behalf. Whether to contribute to a political party, and how much, and to whom, should be a private, personal matter — voluntary, individual decisions.

The $1.95 “allowance” violated every one of those principles. By abolishing it, the Tories are finishing the job Chretien started, of creating a truly citizen-based campaign finance system. Or not quite: even without this particular subsidy, the parties would still benefit from the hefty tax credit on political donations (the formal beneficiary is the donor, but in practice the incidence is shared), while candidates would still have their expenses partially reimbursed. But it’s certainly a big step in the right direction.

Ignore the howls of the opposition. It is entirely within their power to do as the Tories have done, and develop a large base of individual contributors. Absolutely nothing is stopping them. Weren’t we all just worshipping at Obama’s shrine? Isn’t that what he did?

Ignore, too, the complaint that somehow this cripples the political process. Much of the subsidy we have been paying these people goes to the very things that are currently poisoning the political process: over-priced strategists and attack ads, push polls and focus groups. Who needs it?

Still not convinced? Two words: Bloc Québécois. Look at the numbers above. We, the taxpayers of Canada, are underwriting 86% of the expenses of a party whose sole raison d’etre is the destruction of the country. Let them work their treason on their own dime.

UPDATE: I am fascinated by the abusive tone of so many of the comments, many of them fuelled by the belief that I am consciously or unconsciously consigning Canadian elections to, in the words of one commenter, a “limited economic demographic.” Or as another put it, “the golden rule, of he who has the gold should make the rules. That’s what you advocate for, yes?”

Um, no, actually. I’ve been an advocate for contribution limits (though I favour global annual limits, all political contributions combined, rather than specifying limits on each contribution) for years, since the days when corporations were handing over $100,000 cheques to the Liberal party and getting hundreds of millions of dollars in subsidies in return. That’s not the system we have now. Though there remain loopholes that should be closed, the basic rule is a $1000  (indexed to inflation) ceiling on all individual donations. I know some readers think the limit should be “tens” of dollars, but a thousand-dollar limit does not strike me as handing control to “a limited economic demographic.”

There may be relatively few people who can afford to give $1000, but that’s the point — they’re a few. In the days when there were no limits on contributions, a few people each giving $100,000 or more could add up to a whole pile of money, as a proportion of total party funds. But now a few only adds up to a little. 

More to the point, lots and lots of people giving much less than $1000 adds up to a great deal. The most famous current example: Barack Obama, whose campaign raised a record-shattering $640-million. Of that, according to OpenSecrets.org (the website maintained by the Center for Responsive Politics), fully 91 per cent, or $579-million, came from individual donors. How many donors? Try 3.1 million of them. So the average donation was less than $200 (the Obama campaign maintains the average is $86, but I haven’t seen their math). Are Obama’s supporters a “limited economic demographic”? All 3.1 million of them?

NICE TRY: One commenter takes me to task for singling out the Bloc’s subsidy for scorn. “Aren’t you being a little dishonest here?” he/she asks. “Separatists are actually funded with… separatists’ money simply because anyone who vote is actually choosing the political party that will receive his $1.95 per vote.” 

Um, no. The money comes from general revenues. There isn’t some income tax check-off whereby the individual taxpayer gets to decide who gets his money (though that would be an improvement on the current setup). It all comes from the taxpaying public as a whole.

It’s true that the money is allocated by the decisions of Bloc voters, but that’s a different thing entirely. That the Bloc is helping itself to public funds via Bloc supporters does not alter the fact that a separatist party depends for almost the whole of its funding on the taxpayers of Canada.

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  • michael b

    Um, no. The money comes from general revenues. There isn’t some income tax check-off whereby the individual taxpayer gets to decide who gets his money (though that would be an improvement on the current setup). It all comes from the taxpaying public as a whole.

    It’s true that the money is allocated by the decisions of Bloc voters, but that’s a different thing entirely. That the Bloc is helping itself to public funds via Bloc supporters does not alter the fact that a separatist party depends for almost the whole of its funding on the taxpayers of Canada.

    —-Well actually you are being dishonest. The only “taxpayers of CAnada” who are funding the Bloc are the ones who didn’t vote. Let’s simplify this so you can’t be dishonest anymore:

    Canada, for the purpose of this story, has 100 eligible voters, and everybody votes, because their politicians aren’t dirty schemers and so they feel good about politics as a whole
    20 idiots vote dark blue
    10 people with no better choice vote light blue
    40 geniuses vote red
    20 nice people vote orange
    10 hippies vote green

    each of these people pays $1.95 in taxes because 100 people voted and $195 will therefore be needed to give out to the parties.

    While that 195 will then be parceled out so that everyone is helping pay for everyone, if you think about it, in reality, each person only paid 1.95, and so if we’re being HONEST about it, nobody else paid for their vote.

    Where this doesn’t work so cleanly is when you have large amounts of eligible voters not turning out. But that’s their problem, they aren’t exercising their democratic rights.

    So, yes, you were being dishonest.

  • michael b

    Ignore, too, the complaint that somehow this cripples the political process. Much of the subsidy we have been paying these people goes to the very things that are currently poisoning the political process: over-priced strategists and attack ads, push polls and focus groups. Who needs it?

    —-well, no. the vast majority of negativity in the electoral process has been conservative generated. they are playing the game rove-style, a fact no honest (major proviso there, mind-you) person can deny. attack ads, push polls, and focus groups have been conservative obsessions these past years. therefore since the conservatives are the least subsidised party, one could surmise that subisdies are certainly not required to pay for “the very things that are currently poisoning the political process”

  • http://nottawa.blogspot.com Mark

    Some of this subsidy (a dwindling amount of it, unfortunately) also goes toward holding democratic process like nomination meetings and leadership votes – things which Andrew constantly neglects to mention are paid for in their entirety by the public purse in the American example he cites so frequently.

  • Francien Verhoeven

    Andrew,

    It seems that some (perhaps many, I didn’t count) posters are not able to fully comprehend the difference between the allocations of funding coming out of voter’s party preference and the tax dollars being spent.

    When I read your thoughts on this, it is clear that you understand the difference. For it is indeed the case that the $1.75 ($1.95??) per vote is to be allocated toward political parties, depending on the total of the votes having been received. The more votes the more the tiny sums add up for each party accordingly. And so yes, the voter is thereby directly involved in the allocation of those funds.

    But the filling up of the collective tax pot comes about differently. The collective taxpot is being filled up by those who pay taxes. Most pay taxes – a little, a lot – while others pay no taxes at all. And so the allocated $1.75 per vote, might not, in fact does not directly correspond with taxes incoming.

    In other words, some taxpayers will pay for the per vote $1.75 contribution more than once. Some taxpayers will see their $1.75 being allocated to the party they had voted for, fist and foremost, while besides that, another portion of their paid taxes will go to the funding of political parties who they themselves had never voted for. In other words, some (none tax paying) voter’s preferred allocation of $1.75 will be paid for by others.

    That is the difference between the two. But it is an important distinction to comprehend when debating this issue. Not comprehending means rendering this debate futile. And that would truly be too bad.

  • Francien Verhoeven

    We seem to have in front of us, the unfolding of two scenarios: One seems to be the lack of an economic stimulus package, and the other seems to be the public funding of a separatist party. But the two are very much connected. In fact, the connection defines Canada’s current dilemma: the existence of a separatist party forms the continuous stumbling block for furthering the advancement of a prosperous Canada; without being able to deal with this separatist’s lopsided development, Canada’s economic stimulus, either dreamed up within uncertain economical times or ongoing or conceived now or later, will be misrepresented and will be for naught in the long run; The province of Quebec should be considered in completely or not at all.

    Some people are afraid to look at what is really going on inside the room. The current dysfunction of the Liberal Party of Canada and the existence of the Bloc Quebecois Party, are like a pair of elephants in the room. That in itself does not make for an embarrassing picture; we have gotten used to it by now. Yet, what is embarrassing to look at is the scene of these two elephants making out in the middle of the room.

    Whereas once the Liberal Party of Canada and the Quebec people had formed a happily married couple in the past – they had celebrated their many anniversaries, the silver, the gold, the platinum – they are now divorced and have been for years. In between the many anniversaries, they, in turn, had sought out other partners, lovers of a kind, for when the need arose. Also, the teachings of the Catholic Church had become too restricted for the marriage to fully flourish; times had been a-changing and the close partnership had not always seen that one coming! But during the ongoing marriage, all had been forgiven; the marriage had been a strong one.

    The Liberal Party of Canada has not been able to deal with the aftermath of the divorce all that well; its after-divorce life could be regarded as finding itself in a state of severe and deep depression. The Quebec people, however, seem to have adjusted well after the divorce; single once again, the people of Quebec found their voice (BQ) and the alimony payments appear sufficient. Ex-husband Chretien was a generous man, but we shall soon discover where he got the money for making his alimony payments.

    Alas, now that the Liberal Party and the Quebec people have been officially divorced, why are they still making out as ex-lovers in full view of everyone within the room?

    Such a strange country we live in. Canada: a so-called stimulus package touted about as being necessary, cannot be defined by any stretch of the imagination, yet, such package, thus far completely undisclosed by opposition parties and media alike, seems to be able to virtually undo this current government, soon. The sooner the better! Out with Harper! But the current Harper government, in fact, is all in favour of taking the necessary time to properly evaluate what this economic stimulus package should contain if and when one is needed (the words ‘if’ and ‘when’ being of great importance). The next financial statement will provide further updates. But such government proposals are dismissed by the opposition parties and media alike. Such proposals are deemed to be so un-Canadian.

    This up-front posturing by the opposition parties, and many voices coming from the media, might be due to the long believed-in notion that Canada should not stand as leader but should always walk as a follower; other countries (many, so many!) have unveiled their ‘stimulus packages’ (really?), and so Canada should not be left behind. Never! Where Canada finds itself standing – we are still standing, are we still standing? – seems to be beside the point. Business tax cuts (being overly helpful now, under the circumstances) had been announced in previous budgets. The GST had been cut by two percentage points long ago (foresight anyone?) but are only now being taken into consideration by other countries. But never mind. Making use of comparison to Britain and the likes is done so arbitrarily: another fine Canadian custom to uphold.

    This posturing then, this touting about of the need for a stimulus package, thus far undisclosed by all the opposition parties, is regarded and is to be seen as real Canadian leadership. The undisclosed truly does wonders! And it does its wonders precisely because the opposition needs to disclose nothing but to talk about stimulus packages, which, thus far undisclosed, can and will mean absolutely everything to everybody. Ah, the Potential, the Potential. The Potential!

    On the other hand, we have a proposal – the elimination of public funding for a separatist party – which is clear-cut, which is straight forward and leaves nothing to the imagination (even the BQ leaves nothing to the imagination), yet has been severely criticized upon by the opposition parties, and media alike, as being disgraceful. Yet, what exactly is so disgraceful and distasteful about the proposed change is not elaborated upon further. (Here again we find ourselves within Canadian custom territory: President elect Obama is our hero too, yeah, yeah, Obama, but when it comes to comparisons in regard to Obama’s fundraising methods, we prefer not refer to ‘our’ hero. ‘Foresight anyone?’).

    The fact that Canadian taxpayer’s money is being used for propping up a separatist party is graceful, is tasteful?

    I will say that ex-husband Chretien should pay the alimony coming out of his own pockets. But now it seems the Canadian taxpayer is willing to pick up the tab ongoing and more besides.

    I would suggest that the recently divorced people of Quebec, in the form of the BQ, start looking for a real job. They had never been held back during their years of strong marriage. They have always been in position of taking up courses wherever they could be found. Surely, having found its new independence must not be undermined by a lingering sense of dependence; it can break the spirit; receiving alimony payments eternally must be stifling that sense of a true independence somewhat, one would think. Oops, did I say ‘think’? Sorry, but the sentimental needs to go sometimes, as happens after all divorce proceedings, eventually.

    But there we have it: a room full of people too embarrassed to look at the two elephants making out in the middle of the room; The conduct of two ex-lovers doing their thing, all the while the Liberal Party of Canada eyeing its new lover in the form of the NDP, courting this new lover, while simultaneously trying to satisfy the BQ ( they being fully aware, while making out, that the stranglehold marriage is and will remain a thing of the past) with slogans such as ‘stimulus packages, now!’ (of course, the NDP readily agrees: the more the better!; that has always been their slogan. And, as we understand it, the BQ is forever prepared to take on more money from the ex-partner; that is to be part of the complete satisfaction), and “the country should continue picking up the alimony tab.’ ‘By the way, let’s pay ourselves some alimony out of the same pot (the tax pot, in case that wasn’t clear enough); we, the Liberal Party of Canada, were partners in the divorce as well, you know!”

    Yeah, we know, but we’re not supposed to know. Canada should continue believing that no hanky-panky is going on. After all, it’s Harper who had the dirty mind. Dirty, dirty mind Harper! It’s Harper who doesn’t know what he is talking about. But I think he does know what he’s talking about, and furthermore, I do think Harper wished he could talk about it much more openly so that the Canadian people would be forced to look at the two elephants making out within the room.

    But perhaps Harper thinks it too embarrassing for pointing out, and if so, I would whole heartedly agree with him on that. (Chretien courting Broadbent, while making out with Duceppe??? Who really wants to look at that picture?) But, all Canadians have this in front of us and we know it!

  • David Joanisse

    Just think! Maybe the Tories can have their cake and eat it too! In the name of fiscal responsibility, the Tories can save the country $30 million and turn Canada into a one-party state at the same time by depriving all the other parties of funds at election time. This is a stroke of genius that only a machine politician like Stephen Harper would come up with. Let’s face it: the fact that the Tories were only able to win a plurality in the last election prooves that Canadians don’t really want him as Prime Minister any more than they want the others. It’s just that the Tories can’t really dump Harper as party leader until they actually lose an election, because he appears to be “successful” at winning elections. However, if the Conservatives can make it impossible for the candidates of the other parties to stand for parliament, they won’t have to worry about losing elections or replace party leaders who can’t win them. That’s why one-party dictatorships have always been attractive to machine politicians like Stephen Harper, or at least Joseph Stalin.

  • Olivier

    About that treason thing: Hopefully, you won’t forget to mention it next time the issue is discussed by that “At Issue” Panel you are on, eh?

    Because I think that whole notion of the BQ being a pack of traitors has legs, really! If you keep saying it on every platform, maybe some of those poor lost souls who actually voted for thos rats will hear about it… And then, at last the travesty of our once great democracy will come to an end!

    Right?

    Come on Andrew, just do it!

  • Ray Argyle

    Andrew, how could you be so wrong as you were Thursday night on At Issue? Every point you tried to make has been proven irrelevant. Sad to see such an appealing writer get it so wrong!

  • http://angryfrenchguy.com angryfrenchguy

    “Andrew, how could you be so wrong as you were Thursday night on At Issue? Every point you tried to make has been proven irrelevant. Sad to see such an appealing writer get it so wrong!”

    Hey,I feel the same way! So first Andrew recycles almost word-for-word the very same arguments used by other conservative pundits like L. Ian MacDonald at the National Post, complete with factual errors like the 86% figure about the Bloc’s share of funding, and the very strong use of the word ‘treason’, then he goes on TV and tries very unconvincingly to have us believe he actually believes those arguments himself…

    Am i the only one to think someone is executing a play?

  • Francien Verhoeven

    ” factual errors like the 86% figure about the Bloc’s share of funding”

    So, angryfrenchguy,

    what would the numbers be according to you? Tell me in your own words how much public money the BQ party machine runs on?

  • Francien Verhoeven

    “at the same time by depriving all the other parties of funds at election time”

    Who is depriving whom from what. As far as I know, president elect Obama ran his campaign on donated money, and the Conservative party of Canada seems to be able to hold its own when it comes to comparisons.

    Oops, sorry, never invoke the name Obama and Harper in one sentence. They should have nothing in common, at least nothing when observing what’s actually happening out there:

    Democratic slogan supreme: “Change! Change!”

    Governor-General, would you be so willing as to appoint as our new Canadian PM Mr.Ignatieff a man thus far unelected by his own party AND a man thus far unelected by the Canadian voters.

    Democratic slogan supreme: “Change! Change!”

    Well, the Governor General has no background in constitutional matters. Yes, yes, but she can always ask for advice, not?

    Not according to the hat we had pulled Palin out of. Sorry, my mistake: it was the hats we’d been wearing. New hat now!

  • Jack Mitchell

    Francien — Ignatieff, though rejected by the Lord, certainly was elected by the good citizens of Etobikoe. Stephen Harper’s never been elected by Canadians as anything but the MP for Calgary Southwest. His appointment as Prime Minister resulted from his being leader of the largest group of MP’s in the House, as would the appointment of a new prime minister next Tuesday.

    Useful background reading here.

  • don

    As the Opposition Liberals and NDP feverishly met behind closed doors to discuss ways to form a “viable” coalition-From Wikipedia, the encyclopedia-A coalition is an alliance among individuals, during which they cooperate in joint action, each in his own self-interest.
    collaborating with pq?? what will your group be called.? may I suggest the “quisling party” -Thesaurus-Noun.quisling – someone who collaborates with an enemy

  • Gustav

    The Bloc is good for Quebec.

  • sam green

    Andrew Coyne,

    You said on CBC that “Harper is pursuing his own partisan advantage” in trying to end the public subsidy.

    You also agreed enthusiastically with Chantal Hebert that it is “very true” that it is the obligation of a minority government to gain the confidence of the house, and nodded when she argued that a minority government does not have a mandate to change election rules.

    How then can Harper’s divisive and partisan proposal be “fantastic news”, and how can you suggest that they should “ignore the howls of the opposition”?

    Even the NP editorial and several conservative commentators are laying this one on Harper. If you considered the interest of the country above your ideology, you’d agree.

  • Francien Verhoeven

    Sam Green,

    but Harper is putting the proposal (to do away with public party subsidy ) in front of the HOuse. Harper is clearly saying that the opposition has the right to defeat the motion.

    What Harper is objecting to is the appointment of Dion as the PM by GG appoinment because the Lib party does not have the seats for such proposal and needs the help from other parties, but hose very parties Mr.Dion needs to form a goverment are directly opposed to what the Liberal party stands for, and thereby Mr.Harper wonders how such an agreement could possibly serve this country. It would be impossible, really, if you think about it.

    The only alternative would be that the Liberals and the NDP drastically alter their stands from where they stood during the most recent election.

    interesting.

  • Gustav

    Across the land we all harken to the clarion mandate of Stephen Harper’s last election results.

    Mmmn… nah.

    If the other parties form a coalition they will succeed in forming a more inclusive and representative government than PM Harper has ever shown even the slightest interest in, and slightest is pushing it.

  • sam green

    “but Harper is putting the proposal (to do away with public party subsidy ) in front of the HOuse. Harper is clearly saying that the opposition has the right to defeat the motion.”

    My point was that this is clearly not an attempt to gain the confidence of the house, which Coyne agreed was their obligation, even while cheering them on. See, I was just pointing out how he was contradicting himself.

    “What Harper is objecting to is the appointment of Dion as the PM by GG appoinment because the Lib party does not have the seats for such proposal and needs the help from other parties,”

    Also true of the Tories.

    “but hose very parties Mr.Dion needs to form a goverment are directly opposed to what the Liberal party stands for,”

    Also true of the Tories. They need less help to be sure, but on economic matters, the three opposition parties are closer together than the Tories are to any of them.

    You might look up minority government…

  • Francien Verhoeven

    Sam,

    “Also true of the Tories. They need less help to be sure, but on economic matters, the three opposition parties are closer together than the Tories are to any of them.”

    Now they are because the want to form a goverment together, but when you look at their platforms, the liberals side with the Cons side of things as often as with the NDP, and therefore your point on minority goverments being equal for the Cons is not entirely true.

    The Cons received dubble the votes compared to the Liberals and therefore the Cons only need a few votes to come to their side,whereas the Lib will need many, many. Almost too many to be put in charge of forming a government. That would be the difference.

    Yes, a minority government needs to come to an agreement with the lacking number of seats, but the Cons do not need the full slate of LIb party seats, nor the full slate of NDP (or BQ) Some members of the opposition parties might decide to vote with the government or disappear when voting time comes.

    If the Lib would form government they would need a complete other party support to survive any vote, actually, they will need one complete other party and then some………..

    The cons are obviously not in the same position. To belief that would be false.

  • http://www.truemuse.wordpress.com truemuse

    Here is Obama and the Cato Institute on campain financing by taxpayers.

    “Obama himself has given mixed signals about it.”

  • http://www.truemuse.wordpress.com truemuse

    Sorry I got that link wrong. :)

  • Francien Verhoeven

    The Cato Institute interview is interesting. A bit like what we here in Canada are dealing with in terms of the Human Right Commission’s interference with publications.

  • http://blog.macleans.ca Lawrence Davis

    I’m too lazy to go through ALL of these posts, but I’ve read enough of them to confirm that there is an increasingly large segment of left wingers in this Country that is beyond either enlightenment or redemption.

    Their visceral and pathological hatred of the Tories in general and Mr. Harper in particular simply boggles the mind, some even favouring a new Ottawa with Dion as P.M., Jack Layton as Finance Minister and a Cabinet post for Duceppe, who would hold the balance of power.

    Sic transit gloria mundi…..and God help us all!

  • T. Thwim

    Lawrence, emigration has not yet been banned. You may want to take advantage of that before us socialist lefties seal the borders.

    Pleasant travels!

  • http://blog.macleans.ca Lawrence Davis

    T. Thwim…..so far only La Belle Province wants to seal it’s borders, but you “socialist lefties” are welcome to move there…..you’d probably wallow in that repressive regime. Have a pleasant stay!

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