Quebec party to refund $200 to grieving parents pressured to pay for access to minister
The Coalition Avenir Québec will refund the grieving parents of a woman killed in a car crash after the couple said they felt pressured to pay for access to the province’s transport minister.
Brigitte Legault, the CAQ’s director general, said in a statement to Global News that Antoine Bittar and Élizabeth Rivera accepted the reimbursement of $200 Friday.
“The party will reimburse them directly,” Legault said, adding the couple is free to donate the money to an organization of their choice.
The move comes as the CAQ found itself in hot water since Bittar and Rivera spoke about their experience during a hearing into a new road safety bill Thursday at the legislature.
The couple lost their 26-year-old daughter Jessica in a car crash in 2017. Since her death, they have advocated for tougher laws against impaired driving. They both became heavily involved in Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD). Rivera is now the Montreal chapter’s president, while her husband is a board member.
The couple said they reached out to CAQ MNA Marilyne Picard about their cause to lower the blood-alcohol limit for drivers from 0.8 to 0.5 in Quebec.
Bittar said an employee from Picard’s office offered a meeting with Transport Minister Geneviève Guilbault at a fundraising cocktail last October.
They each paid $100 — the maximum annual political donation — to speak to Guilbault. The couple said they were each offered two minutes with the transport minister at the fundraiser.
During the hearing Thursday, Rivera said she was “disappointed” after their brief chat with Guilbault and that she “found it unacceptable that we were asked to pay $200 to meet the minister.”
On Thursday, Guilbault said she had no idea the couple were asked to pay money to meet her and