The Gold Coast Bulletin

FROM THE TROJAN HORSE’S MOUTH

CCC orders public hearing into election

- ANDREW POTTS

QUEENSLAND’S corruption watchdog has ordered a public hearing into possible criminal offences committed in the lead-up to the controvers­ial 2016 Gold Coast council election. The council was dubbed the ”Trojan Council” after the Gold Coast Bulletin revealed that several candidates ran as independen­ts despite being secretly backed by the LNP. The CCC hearings will investigat­e allegation­s that some candidates advertised or fundraised as an undeclared group, provided returns that were false or misleading and failed to operate dedicated bank accounts for election funds. The hearings will also investigat­e the Moreton Bay Regional Council and Ipswich City Council elections.

QUEENSLAND’S chief corruption watchdog will hold a public hearing to determine if criminal offences were committed during last year’s Gold Coast City Council elections.

The Crime and Corruption Commission (CCC) hearing will investigat­e candidate conduct in the lead-up to the March 2016 poll.

The Operation Belcarra probe was opened in July after the Gold Coast Bulletin published more than 60 reports under a “Trojan Council” banner, exposing a bloc during the independen­t elections.

The CCC’s seven-day hearing, which will be streamed live online, will be held in Brisbane from April 18-21 and April 26-28 and will be presided by the CCC chairman Alan MacSporran QC.

The Moreton Bay Regional Council and Ipswich City Council elections will also be put under the microscope.

“The purpose of the hearing is to gather informatio­n about possible criminal offences to support Operation Belcarra and to also canvass broader issues related to corruption and integrity in local government,” the CCC said in a statement yesterday.

A witness list is yet to be made public. According to the terms of reference published by the CCC, the hearings will investigat­e whether candidates in the Gold Coast, Moreton Bay and Ipswich local government elections:

• Advertised or fundraised for the election as an undeclared group of candidates.

• Provided an electoral funding and financial disclosure return that was false or misleading in a material particular.

• Have not operated a dedicated bank account during the candidates’ disclosure period to receive and/or pay funds related to the candidates’ election campaign. The hearings will also: • Examine issues or practices relating to groups of candidates, independen­ce of candidates, election gifts and funding, conflicts of interest or material personal interests by councillor­s.

• Examine strategies or reforms to prevent or decrease actual or perceived corruption risks.

In a statement, Mayor Tom Tate, who remains overseas, yesterday said: “I will comply with any investigat­ion.”

The CCC announceme­nt came one year after the 2016 poll and 12 years after the Gold Coast City Council previously was the subject of an inquiry.

Following last year’s election, Federal MP Stuart Robert admitted his Fadden Forum fundraisin­g arm donated $30,000 each to candidates Kristyn Boulton and Felicity Stevenson. Mr Robert denied any wrongdoing.

Nearly all candidates at the Gold Coast poll ran as independen­ts. The Greens were the only political party to run endorsed candidates.

Independen­t mayoral candidate Penny Toland, a former Labor state candidate, received a $10,000 donation from the electrical division of the Communicat­ions, Electrical and Plumbing Union. She said she returned the money.

Ms Toland was also alleged to have received in-kind gifts from the CFMEU. She has maintained she was unaware of the donation.

Some other Gold Coast election candidates were accused of receiving profession­al support from party-aligned PR lobbyists, campaign backing from party members and late funding from rich developers.

 ??  ?? TROJANCOUN­CIL
TROJANCOUN­CIL

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia