ABSTRACT

This book explores the problems associated with regulating the funding of political parties and election campaigns in a timely assessment of a topic of great political controversy.

From interest in Obama's capacity to raise vast sums of money, to scandals that have rocked UK and Australian governments, party funding is a global issue, reflected in this text with case studies from Australia, Canada, New Zealand, United Kingdom, and the United States. Taking an interdisciplinary approach with leading scholars from politics, geography and law, this text addresses key themes: contributions, spending controls, the role of broadcasters and special interests, and the role of the state in funding political parties. With regulatory measures apparently unable to change the behaviour of parties, why have existing laws failed to satisfy the demands for reform, and what kind of laws are necessary to change the way political parties behave? The Funding of Political Parties: Where Now? brings fresh comparative material to inform this topical and intractable debate, and assesses the wider implications of continuing problems in political funding.

This book will be of interest to students and scholars of political science, political theory, policy and law.

part |66 pages

The Role of Contribution Caps

chapter |19 pages

3 Contribution Limits

A case for exempting trade union affiliation fees 1

part |49 pages

The Role of Spending Limits

part |64 pages

The Role of Other Actors

chapter |26 pages

8 The Press

The media and the ‘Rupert Murdoch problem'

chapter |19 pages

The Regulator

The first decade of the Electoral Commission

chapter |17 pages

The Courts

Legal Challenges to Political Finance and Election Laws

part |54 pages

Lessons from Abroad

part |18 pages

State Funding and Party Autonomy

chapter |16 pages

Justifications for Regulating Party Affairs

Competition not public funding