National Post: Doug Ford accused of buying memberships

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Doug Ford accused of buying memberships to help preferred candidate win Tory nomination
The Ontario Liberal Party announced it would release a recording of Ford and Surma Thursday which it said would implicate Ford 'directly' in a nomination controversy
http://nationalpost.com/news/politi...-help-preferred-candidate-win-tory-nomination

Ontario Progressive Conservative leader Doug Ford paid for memberships for new Tories —contrary to party rules — and bused them in to help his preferred candidate win the PC nomination in the riding where he lives, say a former top Conservative official and a party member present at the 2016 vote.

The losing contender for the Etobicoke Centre nomination, lawyer Pina Martino, filed a complaint, which included testimony from members recruited by Ford, said the former official, who spoke on condition of anonymity. But the party decided to allow Kinga Surma to remain as the candidate, the source said.

Meanwhile, the Ontario Liberal Party announced Wednesday evening it would release a recording of Ford and Surma Thursday morning which it said would implicate Ford “directly” in a nomination controversy.

If true, the charges would call into question the PC leader’s frequent criticism of controversial nominations held under former leader Patrick Brown, and his mantra that he inherited a “mess” from the party’s previous administration and has been busy cleaning it up.

But a spokeswoman for the Ford campaign said Wednesday the allegations are old, and that the party’s appeals committee has long since reviewed them and found them to be unsubstantiated.

“Kinga Surma is a strong candidate and will be an excellent representative for the people of Etobicoke Centre,” campaign official Melissa Lantsman said in an email to the National Post. Surma could not immediately be reached for comment.

Etobicoke resident Annie Eastwood, who joined the party shortly before the nomination out of disillusionment with the Liberal government, told the Post she was appalled by what she saw at the meeting on Nov. 21, 2016, and by what some of Surma’s supporters told her there.

“They said, ‘Doug Ford came to our house, signed me up and paid,’” said Eastwood. “It is a swipe against democracy when you can just come in and buy memberships and then put people in, give people a (PIN number) and tell them, ‘This is who you’re voting for.’”

The former party official, who wasn’t at the meeting, said the appeals committee decided not to overturn the vote partly because such tactics for recruiting members are widespread, despite rules that say party members must pay their own dues. As well, the party under then-leader Patrick Brown did not want to start a “war” with Ford in a community where he is a political powerhouse.


Ontario PC Candidate Kinga Surma Handout
Martino, a former chief of staff to ex-Conservative leaders Tim Hudak and Patrick Brown, and earlier an aide to the late Toronto mayor Rob Ford, Doug’s brother, could not be reached for comment.

The PC candidate nomination process has become a significant issue in campaign leading up to Ontario’s June 7 election, after several of the nominations ended in bitter disputes. There have been allegations of membership fraud — recruiting new members to vote for a candidate is key to winning party nominations — and ballot-box stuffing.

Ford repeatedly condemned the problems during the PC leadership race earlier this year, and has continued to do so on the campaign trail, blaming Brown for the troubles.

Eastwood said she believed Martino — who ran for the party in a 2007 byelection — was the sole candidate in Etobicoke Centre until just a few weeks before the nomination. That’s when Eastwood heard from Ford’s team that they had signed up 600 members to support Surma.

Surma vied unsuccessfully for a Toronto city council seat in 2014 — the same year Doug Ford ran for mayor — and also managed the tour for Tory Christine Elliott’s second leadership campaign and worked on caucus relations in Brown’s office.

Eastwood said she saw at least three or four buses deliver voting members to the nomination meeting, people she had not seen at previous sessions leading up to the candidate election.

It is a swipe against democracy when you can just come in and buy memberships

They were frank about how they became Conservatives, she said.

“I heard from six old ladies, and I said … ‘How come you’re here?’ And they said, ‘Doug came to my house and he fixed me up with my membership,’” recalled Eastwood. “Others were saying, ‘Yeah, he bought my membership.’ … They all said, ‘Doug Ford brought us here, and he told us who to vote for.’”

Bernard Trottier, who served as the federal Conservative MP in the neighbouring Etobicoke-Lakeshore riding from 2011 to 2015, said he came to the nomination meeting to support Surma but was dismayed by the flood of new members he saw. He confirmed that a number of buses were used, but said he had no direct knowledge that Ford paid for any of their memberships.

“It really bugs me when people go out and recruit what they call insta-members. You just know you’ll never see these people again,” he said. “I don’t know if there were cash payments for memberships. It was just my observation that at this nomination meeting there were a lot of people you knew were not dyed-in-the-wool members. They were insta-members and they were trucked in from various buildings and so on.”

Trottier said such problems are endemic in the nomination process and argued the provincial party should follow the example of the federal Conservatives and ban cash payments for membership. By requiring a credit card, the payment can be matched with the actual member.

“Somebody with a big roll of $10 bills can buy memberships. The best way to inoculate against that is … no cash for memberships.”
 
Ontario Liberal Party to release recording of Doug Ford, Etobicoke candidate Kinga Surma
By Nick Westoll Digital Broadcast Journalist Global News
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File photo of Kinga Surma.

The Ontario Liberal Party says it will be releasing audio of Progressive Conservative Party Leader Doug Ford and Etobicoke Centre PC candidate Kinga Surma that will “implicate” Ford in “another nomination and membership controversy.”

In a press release issued by the Liberals late Wednesday afternoon, it said the tape will be released at the party’s headquarters in downtown Toronto Thursday morning.

Additional details about the recording weren’t released by the Liberals.

Global News contacted Surma’s campaign office and a spokesperson said they “are taking this very seriously.”

According to a biography posted on Surma’s site, she worked for Doug Ford’s brother, former Toronto Mayor Rob Ford, during his 2010 mayoral election campaign. Surma subsequently went to work for Rob Ford at city hall.

In the 2014 Toronto election, Surma ran to become the councillor for Ward 5 – Etobicoke—Lakeshore. She came a distant second to Justin Di Ciano. Her biography said she then went to work for Christine Elliott’s 2015 leadership campaign and eventually for former Ontario PC Party Leader Patrick Brown.

In a 2016 statement, Brown congratulated Surma on being nominated as the candidate for Etobicoke Centre.

“A long-time activist within the Polish-Canadian community, and having served as a board member with local organizations like the Stomegate Community Health Centre and Polycultural Immigrant Community Services, Kinga understands the challenges her community faces,” Brown wrote on Nov. 22.

“Through her experience working at all three levels of government and as a tireless conservative activist, I am sure that Kinga will be a strong representative for the residents of Etobicoke Centre.”

Doug Ford was elected leader of the Ontario PC Party during a leadership convention in March. He was acclaimed as the Ontario PC Party candidate in Etobicoke North later that month.

The leadership race was triggered after Patrick Brown stepped down in January amid allegations of sexual misconduct.

Ford served as a Toronto city councillor during the 2010-2014 term of office and previously worked in his family’s business, Deco Labels.

— With files from Jamie Mauracher
 
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doug_ford.jpg

Progressive Conservative Leader Doug Ford speaks to reporters in Woodslee, Ont., near Windsor, on Wednesday. (Robert Benzie / Toronto Star)
“We’ll address it immediately, and, as I said over and over again, we won’t tolerate anything along those lines as we did with the Brampton East candidate,” he said.

That was a reference to Simmer Sandhu, who resigned his candidacy one week ago after being linked to the alleged data breach at the 407 ETR toll highway, where personal information of 60,000 users was compromised.

York Regional Police’s major fraud squad is investigating that case as an “inside theft.”

Sandhu, a former 407 ETR employee, has denied any wrongdoing. He has not been charged with any offences and has called any allegations against him “anonymous” and “totally baseless.”

“The election is too important to get caught up in the issues surrounding any one person,” he said May 16.

Sandhu was replaced by Sudeep Verma as the Conservative candidate in Brampton East.

Several Hwy. 407 users have contacted the Star to say they have received “robocalls” from the Conservatives canvassing them for support in the June 7 election.

“How did (they) get our phone numbers? The only common thread is that my sons and I have is that we all, at one time or another, have driven the 407,” said one motorist, who called to report unusual election-related phone calls to his family.

Another man said he has received two robocalls from the Tories since Ford became leader on March 10.

“I live in northern Ontario and use the 407 very seldom. The last time was two years ago when we visited our daughter in Woodstock,” he said.

Ford has repeatedly blamed his predecessor, Patrick Brown, who resigned Jan. 25, for leaving him “a mess” of a party organization.
 
FORD家族。Still better than the leftist politician.
 
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In the recording, Ford and Surma appear to approach customers at the Etobicoke coffee shop, asking them to become members. Ford says, “It doesn’t cost ya anything.” Surma then asks them to fill out forms, with Ford adding: “You don’t have to fill that out ... if you’re interested, we’ll do it for ya.”

The party, which is trailing both the Progressive Conservatives and NDP in public opinion polls, also released an affidavit by Pina Martino, the riding’s former candidate who lost the 2016 nomination to Surma, in which she accuses Surma and Ford of duping dozens of people into party memberships and covering their fees.

Ford denied the allegations on Thursday morning, saying he had never purchased memberships for any candidate. But he did not dispute the authenticity of the audio recording and said he had no plans to fire Surma, despite the apparent breach of party rules on membership sales.

“This happened close to two years ago,” he said at a local autoparts factory in Tillsonburg, Ont. “We went through an appeals process. The appeal was totally dismissed. This is the Liberals two weeks before the election trying to change the channel.”
 
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