Every year we go through the same shabby ritual: up to 19 months after some of them have been made, we finally learn who is trying to curry favour with our political parties with donations.
Or rather, we learn about some of the donors. Courtesy of donation disclosure laws that are a relic of the Howard era, parties and donors are not required to disclose donations of under $13,000 (although to its credit the ALP has consistently reported all donations over $1000, as the Greens now do as well). Moreover, there are huge loopholes in the definition of donations. For example, “purchasing” a good or service from a political party, such as a seat at a dinner table with a minister, is not considered a donation.
The entire reporting system is woefully out of date. We should have online, near-real time reporting of donations by federal, state and territory branches of political parties. Instead, we are required to wait until February 2016 to find out who was donating to politicians as long ago as July 2014.
Most of all, there is little penalty for late disclosure. Political parties routinely get away with declaring hundreds of thousands of dollars in donations years later, long after anyone has stopped scrutinising them. Bill Shorten’s convenient failure to declare an in-kind donation from a company to his 2007 election campaign is just the tip of the iceberg.
Every year, Crikey makes the same editorial call: our analog-era joke of a disclosure regime needs to be overhauled. But there is little political will within the major parties for greater transparency. The last politician to seriously attempt reform was John Faulkner under Kevin Rudd. To its shame, the Coalition thwarted his efforts. Since then, both sides have treated voters with contempt.
Every year it’s the same, and every year it just gets more depressing.
Fix the political donation system.
* Donations only allowed from natural persons.
* Annual limit attainable by most either in cash or volunteered time. Say the equivalent of four weeks minimum wage (ca. $2,700).
I’m skeptical there should be ANY public funding for political campaigning at all.
How do you calculate the monetary value of all that partisan positive PR generated by Limited News (with that lump of the msm market they edit) for their Limited News Party : the negative PR for the “others” Opposition – to influence enough votes as to elect their party.
But then again it’s not too hard to guess who’s giving what – just watch who gets the party favours?
The “energy” companies have been funding both sides of Parliament. When you consider that these guys don’t just sell energy, they sell fossil carbon, it becomes clear that a conflict of obligation is ahead for our governments of both hues.
As Laws create Crimes, so any “reform” aimed at identifying generous donors in a prompt & timely manner would result in the BigAr$e end of town doing it under the table.
Doc’s idea of only natural persons being allowed is commendable but rortable.
Only a complete, clean break – making it a crime would help so long as if detected the full power of the Commonwealth comes down from a great height.
It might help if it were made clear that political parties are no more than private clubs, like butterfly or stamp collecting, except that the aim is to Rule and thus should be scrutinsed with very, heavy scroot.
Fat chance I know, I’m dreaming.