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Severance for ex-MPs costs estimate of $3.3M, Canadian Taxpayers Federation says

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The Canadian Taxpayers Federation estimates that MPs who lost their seats or stood down before the election could get $3.3 million in “golden goodbyes.”

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Fifty-one MPs, who lost their seats or decided not to stand again, qualify for a severance cheque worth half their salary — some $92,900 or more if they were a cabinet minister or chaired a committee.

If they are 55 or older and had been an MP for six years, they qualify for a pension instead.

The Canadian Taxpayers Federation estimates that pensions for MPs leaving office in 2021 will cost the public purse $1.4 million a year.

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It says MPs’ severance payments will cost the taxpayer $3.3 million.

Some MPs will miss out on a pension because the election was called a month short of the six years they needed to qualify.

Benefits for Canadian MPs leaving office are more generous than in some other comparable countries, including the United Kingdom.

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In the U.K., MPs who lose their seat get a “loss of office payment” which is worth a few thousand pounds. Unlike in Canada, they get nothing if they decide not to fight the election.

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