In the final days of the 1995 Manitoba Provincial election campaign,
a newspaper story appeared about a Tory campaign manager, Allan
Aitken. Mr. Aitken admitted that he had provided advice to three independent aboriginal
candidates running in several rural ridings
with high numbers of aboriginal voters. The story went nowhere, with
denials of wrong-doing from all around.
Elections Manitoba conducted an investigation following an official
complaint from the NDP, and several months later declared there was
no reason to lay charges.
Between the fall of 1997 and spring of 1998, I talked with a number
of individuals who had information about the events surrounding the
election.
One was a former candidate who told me that during the election, he
heard the Tory campaign manager discuss a plan to use the
independents as vote-splitters. But there was no proof, no first
hand witness, and no one willing to go forward. It amounted to a
rehash of old speculation.
Finding and interviewing any of the candidates involved proved
extremely difficult. One, Darryl Sutherland, had dropped out of
sight after the election. No one knew where he was, or admitted to
knowing. It took weeks of casting a net of telephone calls, messages
and personal inquiries with relatives and friends, before Darryl
Sutherland called me one day in 1998.
He was angry, abusive and offered no information, or confirmation of
anything. Over a period of a couple of months of cautious, careful
phone conversations, I convinced him to at least meet and talk with
me. One night I traveled to the Peguis reserve, about three hours
north of Winnipeg.
Once we sat down to talk, Darryl Sutherland shared some remarkable
information.
He was convinced to run as an Independent by Allan Aitken, and local
Conservative Party heavy weight, Cubby Barrett. Sutherland went
along with the idea because he was naive, trusting and felt he owed
Barrett his loyalty. He laughed at the suggestion that Elections
Manitoba's investigation had been "thorough" as the Chief
Electoral Officer had said. No one had ever talked to Darryl
Sutherland about his candidacy.
Cubby Barrett wouldn't agree to any interview. Neither would Allan
Aitken. Taras Sokolyk did agree to an interview on the steps of the
legislature. He had since become the Premier's chief of staff. Taras
Sokolyk denied everything, and called the allegations "untrue
and politically motivated". The Premier himself stepped into
the fray. Gary Filmon dismissed the pending CBC investigation as
well, by saying he trusted Elections Manitoba more than the
information he was hearing from the CBC's inquiries. Elections
Manitoba refused to discuss any aspect of its investigation.
There were at least another half a dozen people contacted or
interviewed in order to judge the reliability of the picture that
was emerging.
The potential consequences of the story weighed heavily on my
conscience. The allegations, once public could devastate careers,
and likely affect the political balance in Manitoba, which had been
governed by the Conservatives for a decade.
The Conservative Party and the Premier's office was well aware of
this. The Premier's press secretary warned me I'd be ruining
reputations by broadcasting baseless allegations. The story, she
said, would be "a one day wonder".
The first elements of the story aired on the morning of June 22,
1998. Two radio news stories were part of the CBC Morning news
program, World Report. These aired from coast to coast. In Manitoba,
the stories set off a hailstorm of questions in the legislative
assembly. Premier Gary Filmon at first denied anything about the
story was credible. He suggested it was NDP sleazy-mongering.
Longer, more detailed stories aired simultaneously on CBC radio's
"The World at Six" nationally at six p.m. local time, and
on CBC TV's "24Hours" in Manitoba. The strength of the
allegations became increasingly difficult for the Premier to reject.
After a tumultuous week in the legislature, the Premier had a
remarkable about face, and agreed to a public inquiry. It would be
several months, however before anyone would know exactly why Gary
Filmon had decided to an Inquiry was his only option.
The Inquiry lasted more than thirty days spread out over several
months from November 1998, to February 1999. What Manitobans
learned, was this: there was indeed a plan hatched by Taras Sokolyk,
Allan Aitken and Cubby Barret to front several candidates in the
1995 election. Five thousand dollars in cash was handed to one
candidate who was told to lie to Elections Manitoba about where the
money came from. Taras Sokolyk used four thousand dollars of PC
party money to kick start the scheme, then enlisted the help of his
friend Julian Benson to secretly pay it back, and alter the Tory
party records so the transactions would be difficult to trace.
Julian Benson was the Secretary to Treasury Board, the man who
handled Manitoba's money. He was also a friend and confidant to
Premier Gary Filmon.
Other high profile Conservatives were also
called to testify, and they boasted of a "win at all
costs" attitude when it comes to elections. Bob Kozminiski, a
businessman and Conservative fund raiser bragged to the Inquiry he'd
do "anything" to defeat the NDP.
A day after his testimony, Mr. Filmon went on Manitoba's
most-listened to talk show, and named me personally, suggesting my
ethics should be investigated by the CBC ombudsman. He misquoted
testimony, and did nothing to challenge the talk show host, who
suggested it was a mistake for Manitoba tax payers to be paying
"a million dollars" for this inquiry.
Weeks of testimony later, Commissioner Alfred Monnin, a retired
judge, released his report.
"As a trial judge I conducted a number of trials. As an
appellate court judge I read many thousands of pages of transcript
in a variety of cases: criminal, civil, family, etc. In all my years
on the Bench I have never encountered as many liars in one
proceeding as I did during this inquiry."
- Alfred Monnin, March 29, 1999 Alfred Monnin confirmed the original
CBC investigation. A group of top ranking Conservatives, right in
the Premier's Office, thought they could get away with manipulating
an election.
But because the two year limit for prosecution had expired no one
faced criminal charges.
As a result Monnin recommended changing Manitoba's election laws to
close the loop holes through which these individuals were able to
slide.
Among the significant changes enacted by the legislature, as a
result of the Inquiry: