ANC chief whip pushes parties to disclose funding
THE ANC in Parliament has called for the regulation of party funding, saying parties must disclose their funders.
ANC chief whip Jackson Mthembu said yesterday their call was in line with the ANC resolution taken at the Polokwane conference in 2007.
He said the regulation of party funding would block people with vested interests from influencing parties – and in this way working against the advancement of democracy.
Mthembu said they wanted an ad hoc committee to be established soon – with a deadline to complete its work by the end of the year.
The committee will also be tasked with looking at the model of funding for parties represented in Parliament.
The current system is based on proportional representation, with the ANC getting the biggest slice of the R150 million allocated by the IEC to parties.
Mthembu said this was a small amount to be split between 13 parties represented in Parliament.
He said any new system would require the National Assembly to address the fact that the funding of parties by private donors remains unregulated.
Parliament was taken to court by the now defunct Institute for Democracy in South Africa (Idasa) to force parties to disclose their private donors, but it lost the case twice in the early 2000s.
Another NGO, My Vote Counts, has taken Parliament to the Western Cape High Court, to get parties to disclose their funders and the matter is due to be heard soon.
Mthembu said:“The issue is not public funding, but throwing in transparency about where do we get additional funding.
“This must be declared so that the people of the country know where we get our funding from, or whether this source of funding is not influencing us adversely in our democratic project.”
He said the ANC would make its own submission in the ad hoc committee in support of the disclosure of private donors.
DA chief whip John Steenhuisen said he fully supported the proposal.
However, he called on the ANC to come clean on its funding by private donors including Chancellor House.
Steve Swart of the ACDP said it supported moves to make funding of parties in Parliament equitable.
He said parties must be supported on a 50/50 basis.
“We support all attempts to make party funding more equitable to make the playing ground level,” he said.
UDM leader Bantu Holomisa said the party had been calling for the disclosure of private funding since 1999.
He said it wanted a draft Bill soon to deal with the matter of funding.