Federal government surrenders Olympic tickets
The federal government, which once snatched up 2500 tickets for 2010 Vancouver Olympic tickets, is now returning 75 to 80 per cent of them for sale to the general public. The value of the remaining tickets is about $300,000, which is less than the $1 million bought by the B.C. government, and the $340,000 of tickets bought by the City of Vancouver.
Any temptation to give the federal government a round of applause should be tempered by a few other relevant facts. First, the "Feds' seat sale wins gold for good PR" as Don Martin of the Calgary Herald wrote. It always looks bad for politicians who sit in prime seats the general public never got a chance to get. It's one reason why NDP and Liberal MPs were forbade from snatching them up. (Not that a few didn't try. MP Joyce Murray asked for ten passes but got shot down, leaving Michael Ignatieff as the sole Liberal with priviledge).
Meanwhile the Bloc Quebecois has not hesitated to order some tickets. This is no shocker given that the Bloc has already made an Olympic sport of shamelessly getting as much out of Canada as possible despite the contradiction of fighting for as much autonomy as possible. For this, the Bloc's main competitor is the Assembly of First Nations.
Don Martin also says some Conservative MPs are quietly grumbling that they have to pay for these reserved tickets out of their own pockets. And with some events such as figure skating to cost $3,200, they say they can only afford to attend one or two events. (MPs make more than $150,000 annually, plus benefits, with taxpayers contributing four times as much to their pension as the MPs themselves).
Martin reports,
Clearly the cough-up-the-cash requirement has separated the seriously interested from the casual observers. MPs only bought a total of 222 tickets worth $66,000 while federal bureaucrats bought 268 tickets worth $127,000. Some 430 tickets worth $90,000 (obviously not the hottest events) were resold to federal partners and the rest returned to Vanoc.
It's not clear why bureaucrats deserve to be in line before anyone else. But at least this government didn't do what the Mulroney government did in 1988, when it snatched up 10,000 tickets for the Calgary Winter Olympics and also gave prime access passes to local MPs. If nothing else, this largesse achieved at least one thing: it made the current government's approach seem modest by comparison.
Canada's Federal Debt
Your Share
The federal government is adding $153 million a day to our debt. At this rate, the $105-billion in debt repayment between 1997 – 2008 will be wiped out next year. Support our campaign for a federal balanced budget law and help us STOP this clock.
Spokespeople & Blog
In five provinces and Ottawa a team of dedicated professionals is standing up to special interests, ensuring that taxpayers' voices are being heard.
In The News
-
Were the Olympics worth the cost?
read more » -
Coverage of the 12th Annual Teddy Waste Awards
read more » -
CTF responds to Budget 2010
read more » -
Disclosure lacking for federal stimulus
read more » -
BC Budget offers $3 billion deficit
read more » -
CTF debates ex-bureaucrats on tax hikes
read more » -
Regina dome could cost $431M
read more » -
Deficit Spending Refuted
read more » -
Thumbs Down for Manitoba Olympic Pavilion
read more » -
Alberta spends $14 M on Olympics
read more » -
CTF on the 2010 Alberta Budget
read more » -
Taxpayers Fund Walmart Shuttle
read more » -
241 Civil Servants Paid to "Volunteer" at the Olympics
read more » -
CTF shoots down tax hike suggestions
read more » -
Translink will ignore fare cheaters
read more » -
Will taxes rise in Winnipeg?
read more » -
Editorial praise for CTF federal balanced budget proposals
read more » -
STC needs record subsidy in 2010
read more » -
Winnipeg firefighters get $2M for unused sick days
read more » -
Band leaders make more than premier
read more » -
Vancouver's $50,000 politeness manual
read more » -
Taxes and fees to rise in BC
read more » -
Edmonton blows $92 million on consultants
read more » -
EI Reform
read more »




















