Ms. O'Grady confirmed that Mr. Paradis was initially billed just under $30,000 for his share of the advertising by the party's ad-buying contractor, Retail Media, but the Conservative Party sent him a credit note deducting $10,000 on election day.Again, remember that the Cons' national defence relies on their claim that the Conadscam ad buys consisted of contracts solely between individual candidates and Retail Media. If that were so, then how precisely would the Cons' national party have been in a position to provide a "credit" capable of changing the amounts paid and owed at the riding level?
Mr. Nadeau, meanwhile, received an invoice for an additional $10,000.
All for ourselves, and nothing for other people, seems, in every age of the world, to have been the vile maxim of the masters of mankind.
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Noteworthy
Here's one more tidbit from the latest news about the form Conadscam took in Quebec which figures to take the Cons' defence from merely implausible to the point of being something that most people couldn't try to claim with a straight face:
Labels:
christian paradis,
conadscam,
cons
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