Key details:
- The Albanese Government has announced the broad strokes of its plans to introduce:
- Donation caps (how much can be given to parties and candidates)
- Expenditure caps (how much parties and candidates can spend)
- Increase public funding (taxpayer money going to parties and candidates).
- Changes to electoral law often have perverse outcomes:
- Existing public funding models used in Australia already unfairly advantage sitting MPs and established parties over challengers and new entrants.
- Donation caps fail to prevent cash-for-access payments to ministers and shadow ministers.
- Spending caps allow major parties to concentrate their spending on target seats, in effect allowing them to outspend independent candidates in that seat.
- Existing donation caps in Victoria have already concentrated power among a small group of people.
- The Australia Institute has identified nine principles for fair political finance reform that should be satisfied before any changes are made.
- Australia Institute polling research finds that three in five Australians oppose public funding for political parties and candidates, and seven in 10 oppose increased public funding, but there are alternative funding models.
“The integrity of Australian elections is too important for the Albanese government’s proposed changes to be rushed through without scrutiny, including a thorough parliamentary inquiry,” said Bill Browne, Director of the Australia Institut










My oma would read me Aesop’s fables as a child because she believed stories should always teach you something. And that something was always easier to learn through the lessons of someone else.







