The Albanese government aims to rush through legislation within a fortnight for political donation and spending caps, after in-principle support from the opposition.
The new regime, to be unveiled by Special Minister of State Don Farrell on Friday, would impose a $20,000 “gift cap” on what any recipient could obtain from a particular donor in one calendar year.
The cap on the total amount a donor could give in a year, covering multiple recipients, is expected to be more than $600,000.
That cap is set high, both to stop donors getting around it and to head off a successful High Court challenge on the grounds of limiting freedom of communication.
There would be multiple spending caps for election campaigns.
These include a national $90 million cap per party, state caps for senate campaigns which would vary between states, and a $800,000 cap per candidate in an individual seat.
The regime will also lower the threshold for publicly declaring donations, and provide for real-time – or close to real-time – disclosure of donations.
The threshold for disclosure – currently $16,900 (which is indexed) – would come down to $1,000. Indexation would only be applied once after each election.
Between elections, donations would have to be disclosed monthly, and would be published by the Australian Electoral Commission.
During campaigns, there would be weekly disclosure. In the final week, it would be daily, and that would continue for a week after the election to limit the opportunity for the requirement to be circumvented.
The changes will include an increase in the public subsidy to $5 a vote. It is now $3.346 per eligible vote.
Also, there will be some modest funding for “administration” for parties and independent parliamentarians – $30,000 for members and $15,000 for senators.
Penalties for non-compliance with the new provisions will be substantial.
The legislation will be introduced to the House of Representatives early next week, and put through by week’s end. It will be debated in the Senate the following week – the final parliamentary week this year.
If passed, the new rules will not come into effect until July 1 2026, with a six-month transition period to allow the AEC and political parties to prepare themselves before the full regime starts in 2027.
The package will also include provision for truth in advertising, based on the South Australian model. But Farrell does not have enough support to get this through and it won’t be passed with the other measures. It is strongly opposed by the AEC (which doesn’t want to have to police such a regime) as well as by the opposition.
Labor has long been committed to donation and spending reform but has been particularly galvanised by the huge spending of Clive Palmer, who outlaid $123 million at the last election.
Farrell said: “Years of inquiries and evidence from multiple elections show us that the biggest weakness to our electoral system is big money influencing our political system.
"Over the last decade we have seen billionaires repeatedly attempt to sway our elections, not through policy or participation, but through money and misinformation.
"This significant package of reforms has been drafted to tackle big money in our electoral system and protect our democracy into the future.”
UPDATE Friday: Crossbenchers say the changes will entrench the big parties
The changes have come under fire from crossbenchers.
Kate Chaney, independent MP for Curtin, who is one of the “teals”, said the bill was “a desperate attempt by the big parties to rig the rules, squeeze out the competition, and protect their patch.
"Both parties are running scared of the possibility of a bigger crossbench that will continue to hold them to account,” she said. She attacked the rush to get the legislation through in a fortnight.
ACT independent senator David Pocock said this was a “major party stitch up that subverts parliamentary process and seeks to lock out more community independents”.
“This is a secret deal cooked up between the major parties who are clearly terrified of minority government,” he said.
Michelle Grattan does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.
This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.