If cheating taxpayers out of their money were a card game, politicians would beat the house every time
If cheating taxpayers out of their money were a card game, politicians would beat the house every time.
Politicians in British Columbia have taken around $30 million of your money over the past few years. They’re spending it on attack ads, lawn signs and junk mail.
This money taken from taxpayers is officially called the per-vote subsidy, but it’s all just politician welfare.
Taxpayers pay $1.75 per vote that candidates get and political parties also get half of their campaign expenses paid for after an election.
By the time the current payments are over, parties will have pulled about $30 million from taxpayers.
This is wrong, and it needs to stop.
This money is not funding for the non-partisan Elections B.C. It does not pay for little pencils, paper ballots and scrutineers’ badges at voting stations.
Instead, this money goes to political parties so they can spend it on their campaign offices, spamming your email and cluttering up your social media feeds with ads.
This is not about which team you usually root for, either. If you support the NDP, your tax dollars still go to the B.C. Liberals and vice versa.
Taxpayers didn’t knowingly wander into this campaign casino. So how did we wind up at this table, paying for these partisan games?
This grift started back in 2017 when the newly-elected NDP government claimed that politicians temporarily needed taxpayers’ money to wean themselves off of the big donations from unions and corporations. Just a few years of mooched money to get them through the rough patch.
So much for temporary.
Today, politicians are trying to make sure that they keep getting this money from taxpayers permanently.
MLAs just finished hearing arguments for and against keeping the money flowing during a special committee in Victoria.
This was predictable.
Political campaigns are a lot like gambling, and if you have money to play with that you don’t care about, it’s easy to get hooked. Even the usually conscientious cartoon mother Marge Simpson got a taste for the slot machine with a bucket full of money.
What makes this swindle even more unfair is that Premier John Horgan said he had no intention of making taxpayers pay for political parties during the 2017 election.
He said on CFAX radio: “At no time have I said that I prefer to make public dollars responsible for political parties.”
Let’s count our chips, because $30 million is a lot of money.
That could pay for the salaries of 50 new full-time paramedics for 10 years. Or it could cover the salaries of 115 new long-term care workers for five years.
Instead, your tax dollars are paying for politicians to slag each other.
Political parties already get lots of government support in other ways.
People who choose to donate to political parties get gold-plated tax credits that are much more generous than charities receive.
If a political party gets a $100 donation, the government gives back a $75 tax credit. If Ronald McDonald House received a $100 donation, however, the tax credit is a mere $20.
Do politicians believe they are more deserving of taxpayer funding than a charity that provides housing for the families of sick children?
Political parties can raise their own money based on the worthiness of their platforms instead of pilfering it from taxpayers and democracy will survive. Here’s proof. We’ve had three general elections since the federal per-vote subsidy was cancelled in 2011 without any discernible lack of attack ads or lawn signs.
Using taxpayers’ money for partisan purposes was wrong in 2017, and it’s wrong now.
Political parties should be raising their own money from willing donors in order to place their bets during an election, and taxpayers should not be left holding the bag.
By Kris Sims
Kris Sims is the B.C. Director for the Canadian Taxpayers Federation.
Troy Media