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Navigating Political Contributions: Alberta's Election Finances and Contributions Disclosure Act

March 30, 2023

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Written By William Osler KC, Gavin Millan and Flutra Kacuri

With the next provincial election in Alberta scheduled for May 29, 2023, anyone considering making a financial contribution to a political party or candidate should be aware of the rules governing contributions as outlined in the Election Finances and Contributions Disclosure Act (EFCDA). The EFCDA was updated effective March 31, 2022, making this the first general election under these rules.

Contributions to Political Parties, Constituency Associations, Candidates & Contestants

Definition

A contribution is defined in the EFCDA as any money, real property, goods or services, or the use of real property, goods or services provided (1) to a registered party, registered constituency association, nomination contestant, registered leadership contestant, or registered candidate, without compensation from them, or (2) for the benefit of a registered party, registered constituency association, nomination contestant, registered leadership contestant, or registered candidate, with or without their consent and without compensation from them. The recipient of a benefit does not need to consent to the benefit in order for the benefit to be considered a contribution.

Goods, services or money contributed by any person and worth less than $50 are not considered a contribution under the EFCDA.

Eligibility, Limitations & Contribution Valuations

Under the EFCDA, only individuals resident in Alberta can contribute to registered political parties, constituency associations, candidates and contestants. The maximum amount an individual can contribute to any combination of these entities in a calendar year is $4,300.

The value of contributions other than money provided to a registered constituency association, nomination contestant, registered leadership contestant or registered candidate is the market value of the contribution at that time. If any real property, goods or services, or the use of real property, goods or services, is provided to or for the benefit of one of these entities for a price that is less than the market value at that time, the amount by which the value exceeds the price is considered a contribution for the purposes of the EFCDA.

Contribution Periods

The EFCDA outlines the specific periods in which contributions are permitted:

Contributions to Third Party Advertisers

Definitions

An advertising contribution refers to any money, real property, goods or services, provided to or for the benefit of a third party advertiser for the purpose of political or election advertising.

The EFCDA distinguishes between political advertising and election advertising:

Eligibility and Limitations for Advertising Contributions

Individuals resident in Alberta, corporations carrying on business in Canada and trade unions and employee organizations in Canada are permitted to make an advertising contribution to a third party for political advertising purposes. However, the EFCDA only permits individuals resident in Alberta to contribute to  third party advertisers (TPAs) for election advertising purposes.

The EFCDA imposes the following advertising contribution limits:

The current election advertising period for ETPAs began on January 1, 2023, and will last until May 29, 2023.

Public Disclosure of Contributions

Under the EFCDA, each registered party, registered constituency association, nomination contestant, registered leadership contestant, registered candidate and third party advertiser must file certain information with the Chief Electoral Officer:

In each case, the filings with Chief Electoral Officer must include the names and addresses of contributors.

The Chief Electoral Officer is required to disclose on the Elections Alberta website the name of any contributor who has donated more than $250 in aggregate, and the actual amount contributed, to any registered party, registered constituency association, nomination contestant, registered leadership contestant, registered candidate or TPA. In an election cycle, this information will be closely scrutinized by the media, political parties and other stakeholders, as well as the public.

Tax Credits for Political Contributions

Contributions to TPAs are not eligible for income tax credits. 

Contributions to political parties, constituencies, Senate candidates, nomination contestants and leadership contestants are all eligible for non-refundable income tax credits. The tax credit must be claimed in the year for which contributions are made and cannot be carried forward to be claimed in a subsequent year.

The maximum tax credit available is $1,000 for a contribution of $2,300 or more.

If you have any questions on navigating political contributions, please contact the authors of this blog.

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