New Queensland electoral law to limit electoral spending

November 8, 2019
Issue 
Elections ahead
Announced on October 29, the reforms are likely to be in place before next year's state election.

Queensland鈥檚 Labor government has announced electoral funding reforms that Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk has as 鈥渢he strongest political donations law in the country鈥.

The proposed law will raise the amount of government funding political parties receive for campaigning purposes while placing tighter restrictions on individual and third-party donations. Announced on October 29, the reforms are likely to be in place before next year's state election.

Under the proposed changes, party candidates would be limited to spending $57,000 on campaigns, or $87,000 if they run as independents. Political parties would have a limit their total election spending to $92,000 per electorate.

This would be the first time in Australia that political parties and candidates had limits imposed on election campaign budgets.

Third-party organisations (including industry lobby groups, trade unions and campaign organisations such as GetUp!) would face similar restrictions ($87,000 in any single electorate and no more than $1 million in total) and individual campaign donations would be limited to $10,000 in an election cycle.

Another change is that government funding would rise for individual candidates (from $1.57 to $3 a vote) and for political parties ($3.14 to $6 a vote), while the threshold to start receiving funding would fall from 6% to 4%.

Announcing the reforms, Palaszczuk that 鈥渢he days of the $10,000- and $5,000-a-head conferences are gone鈥. However, when by Greens MP Michael Berkman if her government would ban cash-for-access meetings, Palaszczuk declined to give a firm answer.

The opposition Liberal National Party has strongly criticised the laws, claiming unions will have an unfair advantage in election campaigning. This ignores the fact that industry lobby groups and peak councils have much larger war chests and capacity to find loopholes in such laws.

The Greens have welcomed the proposed changes but argue they do not go far enough. said the Greens were 鈥渢hrilled that we will finally see measures to cap political donations, limit spending and improve public accountability in our political process鈥.

However, he called on Labor to go further by banning cash-for-access meetings and bringing forward debate on a bill he has before parliament to ban all corporate donations.

Socialist Alliance spokesperson and former candidate for the state seat of McConnel Kamala Emanuel told聽91自拍论坛 Weekly聽the proposed changes will place some restrictions on big money but 鈥渨on't be enough to make Queensland elections democratic鈥.

鈥淭he proposed laws place some limits on big donors, but corporate money will undoubtedly find ways to fund their mates in Labor and the LNP.鈥

鈥淭he Socialist Alliance supports the right of ordinary people to donate to or organise campaigns to advance their interests, so we reject the proposed restrictions on聽unions and organisations like GetUp!.

鈥淚f more conservative organisations also promote their views, so be it.鈥

In terms of government funding, Emanuel said 鈥渨e support a system of public funding that guarantees all contending parties and candidates an equal chance to present their platforms before elections鈥.

鈥淚f funding is to be distributed per vote, there should be no threshold so that small parties and independents are not disadvantaged鈥.

She added, 鈥渢hat a more fundamental reform would be to mandate the Queensland Electoral Commission to produce factual information supplied by candidates about their policies for distribution to electors鈥.

You need 91自拍论坛, and we need you!

91自拍论坛 is funded by contributions from readers and supporters. Help us reach our funding target.

Make a One-off Donation or choose from one of our Monthly Donation options.

Become a supporter to get the digital edition for $5 per month or the print edition for $10 per month. One-time payment options are available.

You can also call 1800 634 206 to make a donation or to become a supporter. Thank you.