In July 2015, Poilievre announced an expansion of a child care benefit program. During the announcement, he wore a Conservative Party of Canada shirt, stated that the payments were from "our Conservative government", and said that "if the Liberals and NDP were to take office they would take the benefits away and raise taxes." Later in 2017, the elections commissioner determined that the occasion was akin to a Conservative party campaign event, rather than a Government of Canada announcement. As the government spent approximately $4,800 related to the event, it was essentially "a de facto non-monetary contribution" to the Conservative party. The commissioner ruled that this was a campaign finance violation, as Poilievre had "knowingly circumvent[ed] the prohibition on contributions to a registered party by ineligible contributors." Poilievre was ordered to post a link to the ruling on his social media.
Wearing a shirt at the wrong place? Sacrilege.
Spending more money than a foreign war cost an entire country? A Ok.
Liberals. They don't give a shit about you, and it shows.
Uhm...
Bitcoin...stock?
And are they going to charge him with campaigning for Canada and trying to make the Canadian economy stronger while holding CAD?
They would if they could.
His claim of violating the Elections Act seems to be when he wore a party t-shirt to a gov announcement https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre_Poilievre
That is literally how all crypto coins work.
Here's why there's 10 million shitcoins:
Popular 'crypto bro' builds following talking about how rich he got with crypto and to listen to him for tips.
Quietly buys a ton of shitcoin.
Tells his followers it'll be the next big thing.
Shitcoin skyrockets as they all buy. Cryptobro dumps all his coin and steals their money. Shitcoin collapses.
Cryptobro points to the spike and says he predicted it and he's rich.
Crypto bro says to listen to him for tips, and there's a new coin...