The old saying, he who pays the piper calls the tune certainly rings true for Australian politics. But who is it that is calling the tune? Well, we will have trouble running all of this to ground, as according to a report from the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC), between 21 percent to 27 percent of donations and other receipts to the Labor Party, the Liberal Party, the National Party and the Greens came from unnamed sources. The AEC found that in the election season ending in May 2022, there were $90 million in untraceable donations. Enough to swing a close election.
So, how could this be, is there some secret conspiracy here? No, not at all, it is not needed, as this is all legal. According to political donation laws, parties are only required to declare the source of donations and other payments that are above $15,200. Thus, a sinister entity, hypothetically we suppose, could split up its controlling donations into measures under that amount, and be laughing, as democracy gets subverted once more. Clearly that threshold needs to be vastly lowered, but the Liberals are dead against it, the Greens and Labor, not so much.
Michael Yabsley, a Liberal member of the New South Wales Parliament is for better controls: "There are penalties in the form of custodial services that pertain to a lot of forms of white-collar crime," he pointed out. "And I can't think of anything more important than preserving the integrity of the democratic system. If someone is stupid enough to say, 'OK, we've worked out a way to get $500,000 to the Liberal Party or the Labor Party,' but then they see that the downside of doing that is seven years in the slammer, they might think twice about doing that."
"Around a quarter of all political donations received by major political parties in Australia from 2022 to 2023 could not be traced back to specific donors.
This is according to a report from the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC), which found that between 21 percent to 27 percent of donations and other receipts to the Labor Party, the Liberal Party, the National Party and the Greens came from unnamed sources.
Untraceable donations to these four largest political parties amounted to A$56.8 million ($37.06 million). This is down from the so-called "dark money" recorded during the election season ending in May 2022, when the AEC recorded A$90 million ($58.72 million) in untraceable donations.
According to Australian political donation laws, parties are only required to declare the source of donations and other payments that were given above a certain threshold, which is currently set at AU$15,200 ($9,916).
The Liberal Party received the most in untraceable donations at A$25.2 million ($16.44 million) followed by the Labor Party at A$22.4 million ($14.61 million). The Greens and Nationals respectively got A$6.2 million ($4.04 million) and A$3 million ($1.96 million) in untraceable donations.
Lack of transparency a pressing issue in Australian politics
According to Bill Brown, democracy and accountability program director for the Canberra-based think tank The Australia Institute, some of the data from the AEC is 18 months old, highlighting how the situation regarding transparency and integrity in Australian politics and how dark money continues to flow into parties continues to be a pressing issue.
"These lags and other loopholes make it difficult to see how politicians and political parties are being funded, and by whom," he said. "With Parliament resuming next week, this is a wake-up call that 2024 is the last chance for meaningful democratic reform ahead of the 2025 election."
Support for tougher donation disclosure laws is mixed. An interim report from parliament's joint standing committee on electoral matters backed legislation that would lower the cap on political donations and lower the threshold for mandatory disclosures of donations to AU$1,000 ($652), and offer real-time donation disclosures.
These measures were backed by the governing Labor Party, the Greens and several independent members of parliament (MP). But the federal Liberal Party and Nationals opposed the measure, with Liberal MP James Stevens characterizing the proposal as an attempt to "financially gerrymander" elections to give Labor – which gets a lot of its support from unions – an advantage and said that the Liberal Party would resist it "tooth and nail."
But Michael Yabsley, a Liberal member of the New South Wales Parliament, backed the measure. He noted that he also wants the federal government to support tougher enforcement of donation rules and harsher penalties for rulebreakers.
"There are penalties in the form of custodial services that pertain to a lot of forms of white-collar crime," he pointed out. "And I can't think of anything more important than preserving the integrity of the democratic system. If someone is stupid enough to say, 'OK, we've worked out a way to get $500,000 to the Liberal Party or the Labor Party,' but then they see that the downside of doing that is seven years in the slammer, they might think twice about doing that."