One has to be immediately suspicious whenever the two major parties agree on anything. Sometimes it is a matter of obvious public importance, but usually it benefits the politicians who serve the major parties and is a disservice to politicians of minor parties or independents and the public in general.
This week the two major parties in the ACT Legislative Assembly, Labor and Liberal, have agreed on a range of changes to the electoral law in the ACT. One must be immediately suspicious. The changes to the way ballot papers are printed to ensure that there aren’t freakish flows of preferences to undeserving candidates are reasonable and were recommended by the Electoral Commission.
However, other proposed changes dealing with political donations, the nomination process and the public funding of political parties are suspect.
Changes to the Electoral Act to be debated by the Assembly today include a proposal to allow anonymous political donations up to $1,500; a plan to allow an ACT candidate to use a Commonwealth return in a full satisfaction of the ACT requirements; a requirement that 50 people to nominate a candidate, instead of the present two; a restriction of public funding of candidates to those who win four per cent, as distinct from the present two per cent, of the vote at the previous election; a plan to no longer require political parties to account in any detail for the way in which the funds they receive are spent.
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