One of the great myths peddled by opponents of transparency of political donations is that being revealed as a donor will lead to intimidation. For example, the Coalition has routinely argued against any effort to lower the current federal disclosure threshold to $1000 on the basis that, as Bronwyn Bishop and friends put it in one inquiry report, it “will lead to potential intimidation of small donors”.
The image the Coalition wanted to conjure was of union thugs entering the small business of a Liberal donor and pointing out it was a nice shop and it’d be a shame if anything happened to it. Of course, not a single scintilla of evidence was ever evinced to justify this.
How times, if not arguments, have changed. Allegra Spender, the independent candidate hoping to end the short-but-already-far-too-long political career of Wentworth MP Dave Sharma, now says she won’t reveal her donors in real time because they tell her: “I can support you but I can’t do this publicly because I have a contract with the government, I’m on a government board, and I know that if I stand up and do this publicly, that will come under threat.” That small business donor has clearly moved up in the world and now fears losing their spot on a government-appointed board.
Not to be outdone in the non-transparency stakes, Sharma says he too won’t reveal his donors, but graciously allows he’d have a “conversation” about donations reform.
But there’s a jurisdiction that requires virtual real-time disclosure of donations now. It’s Queensland, where parties and donors have to disclose donations over $1000 within seven days. Within a week of a state election, they have to be disclosed within 24 hours.
Both sides of politics appear to have coped just fine with this requirement. As for the idea that Queensland union thugs have been identifying and intimidating LNP donors, somehow that didn’t stop the Liberal National Party generating $23.4 million in revenue in 2020-21 compared with Queensland Labor’s $18.7 million.
In NSW the requirements aren’t as strict but you have to report your donations six-monthly, and you have to reveal pre-election donations within 21 days.
In fact, if we’re to keep our wretched, corrupt system of political funding there is no reason why the Queensland law should not be adopted nationwide. Indeed, the 24-hour requirement for election periods should be the standard. Even seven days is unnecessarily generous.
It’s not beyond the realms of possibility that a government of either persuasion would decide that an individual who was donating to its opponents was not someone who should benefit from government largesse — any more than that a safe seat of its opponents should enjoy much in the way of pork-barrelling. The problem is the appointment of individuals or the awarding of contracts based not on merit but on mateship, and the solution is to remove politicians from appointments processes in the same way they should be removed from allocating funds.
And imagine the following scenario: Spender defeats Sharma and ends up a crossbench member under a minority Labor government. A piece of legislation crucial to the interests of a donor who has been on a government board or has a government contract comes before the house. What are the chances of that donor having their phone call returned?
Spender — and for that matter Sharma — would deny such a scenario, insisting donations create no obligation or special access. Tell that to the business donors who crowd into party fundraisers for a chance to bend the ears of ministers and Labor spokesmen and women.
Our entire system of political funding is rotten. But for the moment, anyone interested in integrity should be committed to as much transparency as possible — and revealing their donors immediately.
Glad I don’t live in Wentworth. I couldn’t bear having the anodyne Dave Sharma to represent me and with her familial political antecedents now visible, Allegra Spender presents little real alternative. At least Kerryn Phelps told us what she stood for and voted accordingly..
Surely reason enough to vote for her is not being the Shameleon?
I’m all for transparency but Spenders point is valid.
The union thugs intimidation if it ever occured would be a matter for the police but government retaliation against those supporting their enemies is very very likely – we’ve seen it in recent weeks with funding witheld from flood hit Labor electorates.
I don’t have a solution. Is there anywhere where politics is squeaky clean and trustworthy?
Depends on the level that counts as “squeaky”, but Norway is worth looking at in general, on the subject of radical transparency. Iceland too; probably the rest of the Nordic countries, really. Not that they suffer from much political donation: according to the statistics page that I just googled, the vast majority of party funding there comes from the government. Some (maybe 20%?) comes from party-owned businesses, and about 10% from “other”.
Banning political donations altogether would be an improvement over mere transparency, no?
Tax returns are public too.
The Scandies are brilliant. High taxes, fantastic govt services, free dental, education, etc etc. social services good. Equality in society better than USA and here, little crime and indigency. OK not perfect but the public like it and I each of those countries want to keep it that way. The ideal social democracies. Top education in the world in Finland with the others not far behind.
And not a private school in existence in Finland..
Taxes buy civilisation – eg Skandiwegia compared to the Benighted States.
It’s a choice but We-the-Peeps, are not the ones able to make it.
Zali, Cathy and Helen, so far. Along with Andrew and Jacqui from Tasmania and those that discovered that they couldn’t and wouldn’t support an act that would discriminate against Trans kids, they have risen on the integrity stakes.
So a business is happy to accept a contract from the government, employ lobbyists, but not publically support them with a donation. What BS! This conversation is going nowhere. In the name of democracy, all donations must be made transparent in a timely manner.
All donations should go via a statutory intermediatory body.
People / parties register as a recepient. Donors have some sort of requirement to validate who they are.
All political donations then go into a single bank account and get held until donor is verified – then it gets forwarded to the end-party.
That way everything is tracked & verified in real time.
The body can then publish realtime reports (of varying detail).
A) I would not class someone donating $1000 as a small donor.
B) Should it not be the case that members of government boards or have government contracts should be precluded from donating to political parties. On the other side of the coin, political donors should not be able to gain government contracts, etc.
I accept this, but while I wouldn’t ‘intimidate’ a donor to the LNP (I wouldn’t know how), I would try to avoid patronising their business.
Easiest way is to ban ALL political donations. Strangely I was the owner of the business and also a Union member. Guess that makes me a business thug as we are throwing names around at the moment. There are many ways to help a candidate without making a financial donation. Now that’s an interesting issue. I wonder what value our LNP member places on the copious number of large signs erected around the electorate on property associated with property developers etc.
Who needs donations when one has that support and a Government funded mail allocation to constituents.