Dear Editor,
Not that there芒鈧劉s any lack of entries in this category, but you can add government advertising to the list of things-politicians-oppose-until-they芒鈧劉re-in-power.
As the curtain begins to come down on the Lower Mainland芒鈧劉s TransLink tax plebiscite, B.C. taxpayers have been reminded what happens when politicians have hold of our chequebooks during an election campaign. While we scrimp and sacrifice and pay our taxes to ostensibly fund critical services like public safety, health and education; politicians line up to spend it on flashy ads designed to help them get more votes.
It芒鈧劉s the way it芒鈧劉s always been, apparently.
In opposition in 1999, Christy Clark hammered the NDP government for spending $700,000 in taxpayer money on advertising their budget.
In 2013, the government-opposition roles in B.C. had reversed. Clark芒鈧劉s BC Liberal government unashamedly spent a big chunk of its $36 million taxpayer-funded communications budget on slick TV ads, touting their economic record and jobs plan and laying the foundation for their improbable comeback win.
The opposition NDP 芒鈧 once the guilty advertiser 芒鈧 was outraged by this malodorous spending, even launching a petition calling for an end to taxpayer-funded partisan ads.
Sadly, that new New Democrat position seems to have gone the way of the dodo.
With both the BC Liberals and NDP firmly supporting the TransLink tax campaign, the provincial parties turned a blind eye to TransLink mayors spending $7 million in taxpayer dollars to win this plebiscite.
Not a word of criticism over this blatant misuse of tax money 芒鈧 just a nudge and a wink and a 芒鈧揹o-what-you-gotta-do-to-win芒鈧 attitude, even if it means wasting taxpayer dollars.
In November, B.C. Auditor General Carol Bellringer tried to bring common sense to the issue: 芒鈧揑t is a generally agreed upon principle that government should not use its position of influence or public funds and resources to support an electoral campaign,芒鈧 she wrote. 芒鈧揋overnment spends public money to inform taxpayers about its programs, but citizens should not pay for communications that are of a partisan political nature.芒鈧
Bellringer recommended that government prohibit partisan political information in government communications, and put together specific guidelines setting out what should or should not be included in ads.
While the Canadian Taxpayers Federation generally chafes at the idea of adding another government committee, it芒鈧劉s clear no party, of any political stripe, can be trusted to do the right thing when it comes to advertising on our dime. At least not once they form government.
It seems politicians will spend anything to get re-elected, especially when it芒鈧劉s taxpayers footing the bill.
It芒鈧劉s time to put pressure on them to close the chequebook and campaign with their own money 芒鈧 not ours.
Jordan Bateman
Canadian Taxpayers Federation