https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bev_OdaYou mean like the 12 buck OJ?
The press on ALL sides of the spectrum are happy to play the gotcha game.
It was $16.
Conservatives really suck at numbers. But you bring up a good point: Bev Oda had a history of gouging taxpayers and living high off the hog (ie, committing fraud against taxpayers) and no one in the ruling Conservative party had a problem with it.
In 2006, Oda paid back $2,200 to taxpayers after the Liberals found that she had incurred nearly $5,500 in limousine rides at the 2006 Juno Awards in Halifax.[12] In 2008, she was accused of hiding over $17,000 of limousine expenses billed to taxpayers.[12]
In February 2011, Bev Oda admitted to directing one of her staff to add a handwritten annotation to an already signed Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA) memo in 2009 that resulted in a funding recommendation for KAIROS being ignored.[13] The memo was altered by the addition of 'not'[1] into the recommendation line of the document.[14] When asked about the matter, Oda had at first told Parliament that she did not know who had made the change.[13] Opposition MPs on the House Foreign Affairs committee requested that the Speaker rule on the possible contempt of parliament against Oda but Prime Minister Harper continued to support Oda.[15] On March 9, 2011, the Speaker of the House made a ruling on the issue of Oda's behaviour, stating that "on its face" Oda's statements had caused confusion, which still persisted. Oda replied in the House that she was ready to answer to the confusion, at a House of Commons special committee meeting to be held over three full days the following week.[16] Speaker Peter Milliken found on prima facie that the controversy warranted further investigation by a formal parliamentary committee; however, the committee was not able to reach a decision regarding Oda, as the parliamentary session was brought to an end following the non-confidence motion that triggered the 2011 federal election.[17][18] That election saw Oda retain her seat with 54% of the popular vote.[19]
On April 23, 2012, it was reported that during a 2011 conference on immunization of poor children Oda had refused to stay in the conference hotel (the Grange St. Paul) furnished by hosts.[20] She instead stayed at the Savoy Hotel at a cost of $665 per night for three nights, ordered orange juice at a cost of $16 and hired a limousine to transport her between her new hotel and the conference. She was also charged $250 for smoking in a non-smoking room.[21] The costs incurred were at public expense.[20] Only after widespread media reports of this misuse of public money emerged approximately ten months after the conference did Oda repay the difference in hotel costs but not the limousine costs incurred by her decision.[22] The total amount she paid back after she was exposed by the media was $1,353.81.[23] By April 26, it was announced that Oda had repaid the expenses incurred on the taxi rides as well.[24]