Site icon Virgin Islands Free Press

AUDIT: What Did John Canegata Do With $10 Million From VIGOP?

AUDIT: What Did John Canegata Do With $10 Million From VIGOP?

John Canegata (left) attends the RNC's nomination of Donald Trump in Washington D.C. in 2016. To his right is former St. Croix Senator Lilliana Belardo de O'Neal.

CHRISTIANSTED — A recent audit into the finances of U.S. Virgin islands Republicans reported the territorial party under now-former chairman John Canegata raised and spent almost $10 million since 2013.

The money was funneled through VIGOP, a federal political action committee, that Canegata operates separately from the party’s territorial activities that nominally report to Supervisor of Elections Caroline Fawkes under V.I. campaign finance laws.

The audit was conducted in the aftermath of the Republican National
Committee’s action stripping Canegata of all recognition and suspending the territorial party from participating in the national party until a new RNC-administered election for party leadership is held and an audit of finances conducted.

With all that money you might think Republicans in the territory were
a powerful political force. In actuality, nothing could be further from the truth.

There are no elected Republican senators in the Virgin Islands Legislature. The few candidates Canegata has run since taking over as chairman in 2012 haven’t come anywhere close to winning a seat. Even former Senator Lilliana Belardo de O’Neal, who until earlier this year was a member of the prestigious Republican National Committee, couldn’t win a seat on St. Croix in 2018, despite having represented the district for several terms in the 1980s and 1990s.

There were no Republican candidates for governor in 2018 and 2014 nor
candidates for delegate to Congress in 2020 and 2018.

The party’s only success in recent years has been for the Board of Elections, though this comes with an asterisk as some past or present Republican board members won their seats by default since they were unopposed on the ballot.

Although Canegata was derecognized as chairman of the Virgin islands Republican Party in August of 2020 by a vote of both the Republican National Committee and 2020 Republican National Convention, he still
portrays himself as party chairman both in communications within the territory and in postings on social media.

“On behalf of myself and all Republicans in the Virgin Islands, we wish Godspeed on President Biden and Vice President Harris,” Canegata said on Facebook Thursday. “I pray that they govern our country with God’s Grace and wisdom. Believe in Good Government… Tace et Face.”

Exit mobile version