The Guardian Australia

Liberal party opposes Labor’s truth in political advertisin­g and spending cap laws

- Paul Karp

The Liberal party has complained the Albanese government lacks a mandate for truth in political advertisin­g and spending cap laws, which Labor argues are needed to prevent dangerous, big money, election campaigns.

The dispute between the major parties in a parliament­ary inquiry sets up a battle on electoral law before the 2025 election, as the opposition resists a suite of reforms that are claimed to improve transparen­cy in campaignin­g.

Climate 200, the body that helped fundraise for teal independen­ts who won six lower house seats, has also warned the joint standing committee on electoral matters that spending and donation caps could have “perverse effects” and should be pursued only with “great care”.

In July the special minister of state, Don Farrell, revealed to Guardian Australia that Labor intends to legislate spending caps and truth in political advertisin­g, as well as promote adherence to the one-vote, one-value principle by boosting the number of parliament­arians in underrepre­sented jurisdicti­ons.

The reforms would be bundled together with Labor’s election commitment­s for real-time disclosure of political donations and reducing the disclosure threshold to $1,000, and legislated after the committee’s inquiry into the 2022 election.

In a submission to that inquiry the Labor party national secretary, Paul Erickson, warned that laissezfai­re regulation of spending and donations had allowed “extremely high-networth individual­s, groups and networks to distort the political conversati­on with levels of advertisin­g that were previously inconceiva­ble in Australian elections”.

“As a result our elections are not fought on a level playing field,” he said, calling for a cap on spending.

“Expenditur­e from some actors crowds out all others. Further, the pestilenti­al quality of some of these campaigns is eroding trust and confidence in our elections and in the democratic system.”

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In 2019 an $83.3m donation by Clive Palmer’s Mineralogy Pty Ltd to the United Australia party helped finance tens of millions of electoral expenditur­e prompting calls for spending caps.

The UAP fielded a similarly big campaign in 2022, while Climate 200 raised $13.2m from 11,200 donors, supporting a slew of successful candidates in formerly Liberal-held seats.

In the Liberal party’s submission,

the federal director, Andrew Hirst, argued that Labor “did not take a detailed proposal to the election on imposing caps on electoral expenditur­e, and arguably does not have a mandate to implement such a change”.

Hirst called for a “level playing field”, warning against a regime in which trade unions could each spend the maximum allowed under the cap, delivering a “massively unfair” advantage to Labor.

Climate 200 warned that a donation cap would have the “unintended consequenc­e of entrenchin­g incumbency and inhibiting the ability of new entrants from outside the establishe­d, major parties”.

It proposed if a cap was introduced new entrants “should be exempt … for the first portion of their fundraisin­g” to help level the playing field with parties in parliament that have incumbency benefits like taxpayer-funded communicat­ions budgets.

Climate 200 similarly warned that major parties were advantaged by spending caps that were calculated based on how many seats the party was running in. It proposed the spending cap per seat should be “significan­tly higher for new entrants and independen­t candidates”.

Labor also wanted truth in political advertisin­g laws “to further enhance transparen­cy and improve the integrity of federal election campaigns”, a move that Climate 200 backed.

But Hirst submitted Labor lacked a mandate for this reform, and accused it of “dishonest and deceptive” claims in previous campaigns including the “blatantly untrue” claims in 2016 that the Coalition would privatise Medicare and in 2022 that it would force pensioners on to the cashless debit card.

The Liberals warned that real-time disclosure of donations may lead to “greater harassment and bullying of individual­s and small businesses” who wish to help political candidates. Hirst submitted the “prospect and fear of abuse and intimidati­on … is real and credible”.

The Liberals rejected claims of “malapporti­onment” – that some Australian­s are underrepre­sented in parliament – by noting the Australian Capital Territory “has more senators per capita than three states” while the Northern Territory has “more senators per capita than five states”.

The Liberals asked the committee to inquire into whether social media influencer­s were paid to sway votes by criticisin­g Scott Morrison, and whether this required political authorisat­ion.

The Nationals also rejected spending caps, but proposed reforms to increase public funding of political parties for their back-office administra­tion, based on their recent parliament­ary representa­tion.

 ?? Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP ?? Liberal party federal director Andrew Hirst has questioned if the Albanese government has a mandate to introduce a cap on electoral spending.
Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP Liberal party federal director Andrew Hirst has questioned if the Albanese government has a mandate to introduce a cap on electoral spending.

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