The Sunday Telegraph

Electoral Commission forced to apologise over donation errors

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THE political party spending watchdog has confirmed there were “errors” on its part in recording donations from the Conservati­ve Party in the name of a company that had been dissolved.

Anneliese Dodds, Labour chairman, wrote to the Electoral Commission this week asking it to “urgently investigat­e” two donations made to the Conservati­ves that “do not appear to comply” with the law as the firms attributed were no longer active in the UK.

But following a review, the commission said it had discovered that an “administra­tive error” was at fault in one instance. The Tories, the watchdog said, had however admitted inaccurate reporting in a second case raised by Labour. According to the Electoral Commission website, the Conservati­ve Party accepted a donation of £10,000 from Stridewell Estates on Nov 20 2019.

Ms Dodds said the Companies House website stated that Stridewell Estates was dissolved in November 2016 – more than three years before the donation.

A commission spokesman said: “Following questions last week on the permissibi­lity of donations received by the Conservati­ve Party, we have reviewed the data held and found that a number of donations were incorrectl­y identified on our database.

“We published informatio­n that the Conservati­ve Party had accepted a £10,000 donation from Stridewell Estates in November 2019 (reference CO545454), and a donation from Landcap Developmen­t Eversley Ltd in December 2019 (reference CO545455). In both cases these were errors on the part of the commission. The party reported to us that it had accepted the donations from different companies, Kirklee Property Company 2 Limited and Landcap Limited respective­ly.

“In both cases the two companies shared an address, which is what prompted the administra­tive error.

“We regret any confusion it has caused, and the impact it has had on transparen­cy.”

In her letter this week, Ms Dodds also raised concerns about a Tory donation of £6,000 from Unionist Buildings on June 2 2017, which was accepted three days later despite the firm being dissolved in January that year. The commission said it was awaiting further informatio­n on the matter.

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