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Feds to introduce legislation banning private cash for access fundraisers

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Trudeau has attended at least three events organized by Canada 2020 — two exclusive events with the prime minister during his first official visit to Washington last March and an “after party” last June at a swank Ottawa restaurant following the North American Leaders' Summit. (Photo: Canada 2020/Facebook)

Trudeau has attended at least three events organized by Canada 2020 — two exclusive events with the prime minister during his first official visit to Washington last March and an “after party” last June at a swank Ottawa restaurant following the North American Leaders’ Summit. (Photo: Canada 2020/Facebook)

OTTAWA—The federal government is poised to introduce legislation today that will put an end to exclusive, private fundraisers featuring cabinet ministers, party leaders and leadership contenders.

The ruling Liberals have already adopted new rules requiring that all fundraisers featuring ministers be advertised in advance, conducted in publicly available places and open to the media. The party has promised to publicly disclose within 45 days the names of all those who attended and other details.

The new rules were put in place earlier this year after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was roasted for months last fall over his attendance at exclusive fundraisers in private homes, where wealthy individuals paid up to the maximum donation of $1,550 to rub shoulders with the prime minister.

Today’s legislation will make those rules the law and extend them to opposition party leaders and all candidates for any party’s leadership.

In the midst of controversy over so-called cash-for-access fundraisers, Trudeau says he was willing to consider other options for resolving the problem, including reducing the donation limit and reinstating the per-vote subsidy for political parties, thereby reducing their need to raise large sums of money.

However, Liberal insiders say those options have since been rejected in favour of simply requiring more transparency.

Trudeau signalled the introduction of such a bill in January, in the mandate letter given to his newly appointed democratic institutions minister, Karina Gould.

“Sunshine is the best disinfectant to concerns about our political process,” he said in the letter.

He instructed Gould to “significantly enhance transparency for the public at large and media in the political fundraising system for cabinet members, party leaders and leadership candidates.”

“Fundraisers should be conducted in publicly available spaces, advertised in advance and reported on in a timely manner after the fact.”

During the 2015 election campaign, Trudeau promised to impose limits on how much money political parties can spend between elections, not just during campaigns. Reducing parties’ expenditures would also lessen their need to focus so heavily on fundraising.

However, fulfilment of that promise is not expected to be included in today’s bill.

Opposition parties have dismissed the Liberals’ new fundraising rules as smoke and mirrors, arguing that having Trudeau and his ministers attend fundraisers — whether open to the public or not — still violates the prime minister’s own ethical rules against appearing to give preferential access in return for donations.

They’ve also questioned the value of extending the same rules that apply to cabinet ministers to opposition leaders and leadership contenders, who are in no position to influence government policy.

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