Campaign expenditure - What other problems are there? | Constitutional Clarion
Submitted 1 day ago by Zagorath@aussie.zone to australianpolitics@aussie.zone
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6tXjkYkDG0A
Submitted 1 day ago by Zagorath@aussie.zone to australianpolitics@aussie.zone
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6tXjkYkDG0A
Zagorath@aussie.zone 1 day ago
Parties may have a “nominated entity” which can pay unlimited amount into the party’s campaign account. The Liberal Party’s nominated entity the “Cormack Foundation” pays millions in share dividends to the LP’s campaign account. The new bill would not change this.
Independents are not allowed to have a nominated entity.
The ability of a party to fund advertising within a specific electorate, so long as it doesn’t specifically name that electorate’s candidate or the electorate itself, above and beyond the single-electorate spending caps, is another way the proposal favours big parties over individual candidates. They can redirect spending from safe seats to marginal ones, as long as that spending is on national issues and features party leadership rather than the local candidate, where an independent will always be running on themselves and therefore has only the limit per-seat.
But caps on expenditure are important, if done fairly, even against the cries of independents who might have gotten elected on the back of large spending. That’s why it’s important to get this right, and spend time seeking input from all the stakeholders including minor parties, independents, and legal scholars like Twomey herself. Rushing it through like the two major parties are trying to do is so fundamentally awful.