One approach to answering these questions is to look at the political
party financial donations and lobbying efforts made by Kinder Morgan Canada in recent years.
Not exact matches
Aside from oil pipelines, the NDP - Green agreement commits to holding a referendum on proportional representation in fall 2018 (though it is not clear what form of proportional representation will be proposed) and reforming BC's wild - west election finance laws (banning corporate and union
donations, placing limits on individual
donations, and limiting
party loans to banks and
financial institutions).
Thursday's filings lay bare those
donations and other jaw - dropping
financial details of the first modern presidential campaign in which donors could give unlimited contributions for political ads and in which both major
party candidates declined to participate in a Watergate - era public financing system designed to limit fundraising.
Of course we do receive some large cash and in - kind
donations, but the small donors are the
party's
financial base.
Both the Liberal Democrats and Conservatives have faced taunts of double standards over
party donations from firms that have profited from short selling on UK
financial institutions.
The Conservative
party is notoriously dependent on
donations from the
financial sector.
Notably Rep. Hanna has pushed to support the Democrat
Party, support late - term abortion and Planned Parenthood (who made political
donations to Hanna's election campaigns in 2012 and 2014 - the only Republican to receive such
financial support), and the recent national spotlight on his comments essentially defending presidential candidate Hillary Clinton ahead of her appearance before the Benghazi Commission last month.
On his way to a landslide victory in the Democratic
Party primary last month, U.S. Rep. Gregory Meeks (D - Jamaica) outraised his nearest opponent, Mike Scala, by a ratio of 83:1, with the largest
donations to his almost half - a-million-dollar war chest coming from the industries he holds sway over as a member of the House Committee on
Financial Services.
The Supreme Court issued a landmark 5 - 4 decision today in Caperton v. Massey Coal Co., holding that due process requires a state judge to recuse himself from a case involving the
financial interests of a
party who has made substantial
donations to the judge's campaign for the bench.
Despite that, it is equally clear that the very small
financial donation in this case has had significant repercussions for each of the Solicitor General, the governing
party of British Columbia, the Attorney General's criminal justice branch, and the special prosecutor and law firm involved.
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