Ashton’s election victory in Penticton cost $7.40 a vote

Former mayor's election expenses released this week and show a major portion of his cash was spent on marketing materials

With a Glenn Clark painting in the background, Penticton MLA Dan Ashton (centre) works with his new staff, Barbara Alexander and Dick Knorr in retired MLA Bill Barisoff’s office.

With a Glenn Clark painting in the background, Penticton MLA Dan Ashton (centre) works with his new staff, Barbara Alexander and Dick Knorr in retired MLA Bill Barisoff’s office.

Each vote Dan Ashton tallied in this spring’s provincial election cost his campaign the equivalent of a cheap lunch, according to financial information released by Elections B.C.

The non-partisan office of the legislature published electoral financing reports this week for most candidates — and their respective parties — who ran for office in May.

Ashton, who won the Penticton riding by a narrow margin under the Liberal banner, also narrowly outspent the B.C. NDP runner-up.

The former Penticton mayor reported election expenditures of $85,533.88 that earned 11,551 votes, for a per-vote cost of $7.40.

Second-place finisher Dick Cannings spent $84,612 and received 10,154 votes, equal to $8.33 per vote.

B.C. Conservative Sean Upshaw placed third with 2,277 votes that cost $2.23 each, while fourth-place finisher Doug Maxwell for the B.C. First Party spent $4.43 on each of his 1,181 votes.

Ashton, who could not be reached for comment Tuesday, reported transfers from the B.C. Liberal Party totalling $41,957.80, and political contributions totalling $50,495.

The largest donation to Ashton’s campaign was a $10,000 gift from Siva Contracting Ltd.

An online listing for the company shows it shares a phone number and address with Peters Bros. Construction in Penticton.

A woman who answered the phone there Tuesday said the two companies are linked “in a way,” but that no one was available to discuss the donation.

On the expense side, Ashton spent $34,465.41 on advertising and other promotional materials. His next most expensive charge was described as data processing and information technology at a cost of $9,643.70.

Cannings, meanwhile, put $22,922 towards advertising and promotional materials, and spent another  $22,075 on salaries and benefits.

“In hindsight, I wish I had more money to spend,” Cannings said.

“I noticed during the campaign, (Ashton) had a lot of ads in the paper, which we couldn’t afford to put in.”

Cannings reported total political contributions of $48,911, and transfers from the B.C. NDP and his local constituency association of $70,080.

He thinks the cash injections from the party signalled its strong desire to win Penticton.

“I don’t know all the ins and outs of it, but I think part of that would be they thought this was a riding they thought we could win, so they were going to put some resources into it,” Cannings said.

His campaign also reported three dinner fundraisers, the first of which lost $488, while the other two brought in a combined $1,929.

Cannings’ biggest contribution was a $5,000 gift from a numbered company headed by a Ross Beaty.

The numbered company shares a Vancouver address with Alterra Power Corp., the executive chairman of which is a Ross Beaty, described in April by the Globe and Mail as a mining financier.

 

Penticton Western News