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Interactive Policy Experience

Get dirty money out of politics.

Donations buy access, and nearly half the money behind Australian politics arrives in the dark. Our plan drags every dollar into daylight — with hard caps, weekly disclosure and a properly funded umpire.

Transparency & AccountabilityPolitical Party Financing

418mSpent in the year before the 2022 electionParties spent $418 million outcompeting each other — discovered only nine months after polling day.
1bnIn dark money over 20 yearsAround $1 billion given to political parties with its source hidden from voters.
53%Of private party income undisclosedIn 2018–19 more than half of parties’ private income had no visible source.
1,000Our disclosure threshold, in dollarsDown from $15,200 — every accumulated $1,000 declared, reported weekly during campaigns.

The disclosure dial

Drag the donation and see when — or whether — voters ever find out.

Thresholds: $15,200 today vs $1,000 accumulative with weekly campaign disclosure under our plan.

The plan at a glance

Cap campaign spending

Electoral expenditure capped in proportion to the divisions a party actually contests — ending the advertising arms race the High Court says we can end.

Cap donations

Limits on donations to parties, candidates and third parties, with real penalties for non-compliance.

Disclose from $1,000

Drop the disclosure threshold from $15,200 to $1,000 accumulative — including fundraising-event payments.

Report weekly in campaigns

Donations disclosed weekly during election periods, and aggregated per donor, so voters see who pays before they vote.

Ban conflicted donors

No donations from businesses and organisations with a financial interest in Federal Government contracts.

Fund the umpire

Properly resource the AEC to enforce electoral law and actually scrutinise party records — and bring back broadcast election pitches and debates.

Dark money vs daylight

The same election — under today’s disclosure rules, and under our plan.

In the dark — today

  • Donations under $15,200 can stay completely invisible
  • Who funded the campaign is revealed months after you voted
  • No spending caps — the biggest bank balance sets the debate
  • Government contractors can donate to the parties awarding contracts

In daylight — our plan

  • Every accumulated $1,000 disclosed, events included
  • Weekly disclosure while the campaign is running
  • Hard caps on spending and donations, enforced with penalties
  • Conflicted donors banned and the AEC funded to police it

The full policy

Word for word — the platform as our members wrote it.

The Issues

There can be little doubt that political donations buy access to ministers and other members of parliament, and that the purpose of large donations is to bring influence to bear over public policy. Australia lacks the level of transparency of many other Western democracies when it comes to campaign finance and political parties.

A significant proportion of public funding for elections is reported to the AEC yet is only released to the public as an aggregate figure. Simply put, the source of a large amount of the money parties spend on elections in Australia can be described as a mystery.

Without spending caps, our election debates are dominated by those with the biggest bank balance, not those with the best ideas.

— Alice Drury, Human Rights Law Centre

Our Plan

  • Cap electoral expenditure for political parties proportional to the number of electoral divisions in which they endorse candidates.

  • Cap donations to political parties, candidates and third parties, with penalties for non-compliance.

  • Reduce the donation disclosure threshold from the current $15,200 to $1,000 accumulative.

  • Disclose political fundraising event payments of more than $1,000 per individual, and require parties to report the total raised at each event.

  • Require parties to disclose aggregated donations from a single donor.

  • Report weekly on donations during election periods.

  • Ban donations from businesses and organisations that have a financial interest in Federal Government contracts for goods and services.

  • Bring back public broadcasting of election pitches and candidate debates.

  • Properly fund the Australian Electoral Commission to enforce electoral laws and scrutinise party records.

The Evidence

In February 2023 — nine months after the 2022 Federal election — we discovered that political parties spent $418 million in the year leading up to the election. The drive to outcompete political opponents in paying for advertising and campaigning makes parties highly dependent on a small number of cashed-up corporations, wealthy individuals and unions, most of whom have self-interest at heart.

One of the biggest donors — Pratt Holdings — donated $3.7m, split more or less evenly between Labor and the Coalition. This even-handedness suggests the donor is not backing a party to win, but wants to hold onto influence whichever party takes office. Why otherwise would so much money be wasted for no election gain?

Accountants KPMG, PwC, Deloitte and EY donated $4.3m to Labor and the Coalition over the past decade. During that time, the value of their government contracts increased by 400%.

There are numerous measures that could be adopted to make the donation process transparent, such as real-time disclosure, lowering the threshold for reporting, putting caps on donations and excluding certain sectors like property developers and Government contractors. However, the most urgent measure is to put limits on campaign expenditure — a reform ruled by the High Court as constitutional.

All state and territory governments other than Victoria have caps on expenditure. Queensland introduced caps in 2012, reducing electoral expenditure to ~$8 million per major party, down from a high in 2006 of ~$23 million for the ALP and ~$11 million for the LNP.

Around $1 billion in ‘dark money’ was given to political parties in the last 20 years — over 40% of their income in the case of the LNP. The Auditor-General found the AEC was not doing enough to enforce the laws or to see that accurate records were provided. It did not scrutinise third party records. In 2018-19, 53% of private income was undisclosed; for Labor it was 36%.

The only accountability reform to be passed by this government was the ban on foreign donations — something the Australian Democrats called for years ago.

Analysis of expenditure caps in other jurisdictions suggests they are effective at arresting the arms race. For example, in the United Kingdom, collective spending of the Labour, Conservative and Liberal Democratic Parties decreased by 44.5 per cent between the 1997 and 2001 elections after the imposition of additional expenditure cap legislation. Empirical studies in countries such as France and Brazil have shown that expenditure caps increase the competitiveness of elections and diversify the pool of potential candidates.

In considering the level at which caps should be set, Alexander Fouirnaies’ extensive analysis of expenditure caps in the United Kingdom between 1885 and 2019 indicates that lower caps on electoral expenditure increase the pool of candidates, the competitiveness of elections, and mitigate the benefits of incumbency.

— The Centre for Public Integrity

References

What we’ve done about it

We don’t just demand transparency from others — we practise it, and we’ve been on this beat for decades.

Receipts

Our own public donations register

We hold ourselves to the standard we demand of every party: our donations register is published for anyone to inspect.

Inspect our register →
On the record

We called for the foreign donations ban

The ban on foreign donations — the only accountability reform passed in that parliament — is something the Australian Democrats called for years earlier.

Our transparency platform →
Evidence

The research behind the plan

Expenditure caps cut UK party spending by 44.5% between the 1997 and 2001 elections, and the Centre for Public Integrity finds lower caps make elections more competitive.

Parliamentary Library guide →
Since 1977

Keeping the bastards honest

Accountability isn’t a talking point for us — it’s the founding job description. Money in politics has been on our docket since day one.

Our history →

Make it happen.

Policies like this only become law when enough people push. Push with us.

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