Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

BC NDP spent $300,000 on advisers during transition to power

Nearly $300,000 in taxpayers’ money was spent on Premier John Horgan’s transition to power in July, the BC NDP government said October 17.
john_horgan_credit_bc_ndp
B.C. Premier John Horgan | File photo, courtesy BC NDP

Nearly $300,000 in taxpayers’ money was spent on Premier John Horgan’s transition to power in July, the BC NDP government said October 17.

The government released the figure after the Liberal Opposition attacked Horgan in the legislature for awarding lucrative no-bid contracts to “his longtime NDP friends and supporters.”

The maximum value of the 35 direct-award contracts was $812,800, but the government said the contractors billed for less than half that amount at $295,479.40. Most of the contracts began the first week of July and expired July 21.

“Transition costs are a normal expense by any incoming government, and our new government had a lot of work to do after 16 years of B.C. Liberal neglect,” Jen Holmwood, deputy communications director in the premier’s office, said in a statement.

“Our highly qualified transition team helped us hit the ground running on key initiatives like removing tolls, cutting MSP, and working to get our schools ready for kids in September.”

The contractors included failed NDP candidates, an ex-Manitoba NDP cabinet minister and a number of former NDP advisors, ministerial assistants, communications officers and party officials.

The Canadian Union of Public Employees received a contract worth up to $25,000, but did not bill for any work, the government said.

The Liberals derided the contracts in the legislature, referring to them as Horgan’s “summer works” program for friends and insiders.

“In the absence of any concrete jobs plan — we certainly haven’t seen one — is rewarding his friends with contracts and salaries the NDP version of a jobs plan?” asked Liberal MLA Shirley Bond, a former jobs minister.

Horgan deflected the attacks, arguing that the previous Liberal government hired a transition team when it took power 16 years ago.

“This is standard procedure,” he said “Nothing to see here.”

He added that anyone watching question period at home would understand the need to transition from “one hostile group to a new group.”

“We’ve had nothing but support from those on the other side,” he said. “We’ve had nothing but goodwill and best wishes from the B.C. Liberals as we try to clean up the mess that they left for British Columbians after 16 years.”

Times Colonist