The Guardian Australia

Former Victorian Liberals director Sam McQuestin fined $40,000 over federal election ads

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The former boss of the Victorian Liberals will pay $40,000 in fines after a court found he fell foul of electoral advertisin­g laws and undermined voters’ rights.

The Australian Electoral Commission sued former Victorian Liberals director Sam McQuestin over four advertisem­ents placed in the Geelong Advertiser before the 2022 federal election.

The commission alleged McQuestin, whose full name is Charles David McQuestin, breached electoral laws by not properly declaring the ads came from him and the Liberal party.

One of the newspaper ads was a full-page attack on the sitting Labor MP, Libby Coker, while another was a full-page portrait of the Liberal candidate for Corangamit­e, Stephanie Asher, along with a how-to-vote card, the federal court heard.

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Both paid political advertisem­ents contained authorisat­ions in small text towards the bottom of the page.

Political advertisin­g laws in Australia require authorisat­ions to be made prominentl­y, legibly and in contrastin­g text.

McQuestin admitted to the allegation­s, but fought against paying a fine of up to $150,000, which the electoral commission­er argued he should cough up for the “intentiona­l” breach.

The ad about Coker was the subject of three complaints to the commission.

Federal court justice Michael Hugh O’Bryan on Tuesday ruled McQuestin should pay a total $40,000 in fines, but the former Victorian Liberals director previously told the court the party would pay any penalty.

“The contraveni­ng advertisem­ents were likely seen by tens of thousands of voters,” O’Bryan said in the judgment.

“That is a significan­t matter.

“The failure to include legible particular­s in the anti-Coker advertisem­ent was a serious failure because that advertisem­ent did not otherwise identify the person or political party on whose behalf the advertisem­ent was placed.”

McQuestin did not explain why the contravent­ions happened and rather suggested the busy final days of a federal election campaign often meant ads were “approved on an ongoing basis, and sometimes by way of text message on mobile telephones”.

The judge said while the final days of a campaign may be busy, “the need to protect free and informed voting is not diminished as election day approaches”.

“Indeed, the contrary is true: transparen­cy and accountabi­lity become more crucial the closer in time one gets to an election,” O’Bryan said.

The judge found the Liberal party’s processes were not robust enough to ensure the contravent­ions did not happen.

“The admitted contravent­ions undermined the important objective of allowing voters to know who is communicat­ing electoral matter and accordingl­y protecting Australia’s system of representa­tive democracy,” O’Bryan said.

There was no evidence about whether the ads had any weight on votes in the election, and the Liberal party candidate for Corangamit­e did not succeed, O’Bryan said.

The judge also ordered McQuestin to pay the commission­er’s court costs, subject to any objections.

 ?? Photograph: Alan Porritt/AAP ?? A court has found ex-Victorian Liberals director Sam McQuestin breached rules for election ads.
Photograph: Alan Porritt/AAP A court has found ex-Victorian Liberals director Sam McQuestin breached rules for election ads.

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