New filings released by British Columbia’s elections authority show the ‘No’ side in the province’s upcoming electoral reform referendum is largely funded by BC’s wealthiest elites and right-wing power brokers.
This fall, British Columbians will
cast their votes on whether the province should stick with its
outdated first-past-the-post electoral system or join other countries around the world, such as
Germany,
New Zealand and
Norway, who have relied on a
proportional voting system without any problems for decades.
According to
newly published financial disclosures by Elections BC, it turns out the people who most want to stick with the status quo are
BC’s rich and powerful “entrenched interests.”
For the referendum campaign,
Elections BC announced the government has allocated $500,000 to both the pro-reform and anti-reform campaigns, and will allow an additional $200,000 in advertising funds for each side to come from third parties.
Here’s a breakdown of some of the big spenders who each donated more than $1,000 to the ‘No’ campaign – as well as some of their ludicrous views and shady dealings:
Christy Clark’s Attorney General Suzanne Anton
Suzanne Anton, the
former Attorney General under Christy Clark’s BC Liberal government, is the
founder and director of the No Proportional Representation Society of BC, the official group representing the ‘No’ side.
Anton recently tweeted an absurd theory suggesting “proportional representation” is part of a conspiracy aimed at the “disruption of Canadian economic activity.”
Except that theory doesn’t make much sense: an acclaimed
2011 study found proportional voting systems produced “astonishingly robust” and “quite substantial” increases in economic growth.
Moreover, a
2015 study concludes a mixed-member proportional voting system “enhances both political and government stability stimulating a relatively high growth rate.”
Finally, a
2014 study found that countries without proportional representation systems have an average of 65.7 per cent higher national debts than countries using proportional representation.
Mining tycoon Ross Beaty
Ross Beaty, a wealthy mining tycoon whose company was accused of
scavenging off Iceland’s economic collapse after the firm bought up assets from a failing local hydro company, is also helping bankroll the ‘No’campaign.
Beaty donated
nearly $90,000 to the BC Liberals between 2010 and 2017, including a $5,000 donation to BC Liberal leader Andrew Wilkinson’s leadership campaign.
Ironically, Beaty’s preferred BC Liberal leadership candidate would have
lost the contest under the first-past-the-post system that he is now paying to support.
Venture capitalist Rob Hartvikson
Rob Hartvikson is a wealthy venture capitalist who
got rich from heavily discounted stocks in the gold and diamond industries during the 1990s.
Hartvikson subsequently became
tangled up in a conflict of interest scandal. In 2000, a commission found that Hartvikson and Blayne Johnson, a fellow Vancouver stockbroker, withheld information from their clients and made off with more than $5 million.
Hartvikson subsequently
fled to Ireland in 2001 to avoid public attention.
Future Shop billionaire Hassan Khosrowshahi
Hassan Khosrowshahi, a Vancouver-based billionaire and founder of Future Shop, is
a major BC Liberal donor and serves as a
director for the right-wing Fraser Institute.
In 2015, Clark’s BC Liberal government
sold Khosrowshahi 14 parcels of land in Coquitlam for a staggering $43 million below its appraised value. At the time, the NDP accused the BC Liberals of discounting the land as a personal favour to Khosrowshahi,
whose company had donated nearly $1 million to the Liberals.
Corporate lobbist Jess Ketchum
Jess Ketchum is president of
Ketchum Communications, a lobbying firm whose clients have included the
Council of Forest Industries and the
British Columbia Lumber Trade Council
Prior to becoming a lobbyist, Ketchum was a well-known political operative and campaign manager for the right-wing BC Social Credit Party. He later
worked as a BC Liberal advisor.
Who else?
Other donors listed in the initial disclosure include:
•
Peter Armstrong, former president of the Non Partisan Association, a right-wing municipal political party in Vancouver
•
George Affleck, an entrepreneur and NPA councillor
•
Reid Carter, an asset manager and director of West Fraser Timber
•
Mohan Jawl, a
major developer in Victoria
•
Peter Gustavson, CEO of
Gustavson Capital Corp who sold his previous company for $370 million USD
•
James Sutcliffe, a banking and financial services lawyer.
These donors aren’t the only ones bankrolling efforts to stop electoral reform.
Earlier this year, multi-millionaire lumber magnate and long time BC Liberal donor Jim Shepherd was outed as the person behind a
well-funded astroturf group that was
bombarding British Columbians with attack ads and robocalls in advance of the official referendum campaign.
When FPTP is so good for Big Money in B.C. can it be good for you, too?