Rob Shaw: Time to close the loophole that let OneBC tap public cash for circus-tent politics (Business in Vancouver)
If there is anything to be learned from the collapse of the circus tent, perched atop the clown college, located inside the dumpster fire known as OneBC, it is this: the British Columbia public should not be funding political parties that nobody voted for.
For six months, taxpayers have forked over roughly $300,000 in public funding to a political entity that did not exist on the ballot last October ...
... MLAs who seek new party status at the legislature ought to go back to the polls in bye-elections to get a mandate from their constituents for their new ideas and affiliations.
It’s not a punitive ask. It’s simply requiring MLAs to seek consent from the voters before accessing hundreds of thousands of dollars in public funding for a brand-new political project ...
CLICK HERE for the full story
For six months, taxpayers have forked over roughly $300,000 in public funding to a political entity that did not exist on the ballot last October ...
... MLAs who seek new party status at the legislature ought to go back to the polls in bye-elections to get a mandate from their constituents for their new ideas and affiliations.
It’s not a punitive ask. It’s simply requiring MLAs to seek consent from the voters before accessing hundreds of thousands of dollars in public funding for a brand-new political project ...
CLICK HERE for the full story

Comments
Post a Comment