The political finance systems
of different countries, states/provinces or other jurisdictions may involve
some or all of the following:
- campaign finance
     disclosure and reporting requirements;
- restrictions on size and
     source of contributions;
- campaign expenditure limits; and/or
- incentives such as public
     funding/subsidies, access to the media and/or free advertising.
These measures are generally
adopted to reduce the corrupting influence that large donations or donations
from certain sources may have on elections and the political process. They are
also intended to encourage political competition and establish a “level playing
field” including for electoral participants with less access to financial
resources.
Political finance enforcement
gives force and effect to the political finance legal requirements. Timely and fair enforcement can:
- uncover political finance
     irregularities and violations through audits of campaign finance
     reporting;
- change the practices of
     political parties and campaigns by publicizing violations and/or leading
     to imposition of administrative, civil and criminal sanctions; and
- remedy political finance
     violations by requiring the return of banned contributions or of public
     funding, or other sanctions including removal from elective office.
Enforcement
Mechanisms
Each country’s legal framework
determines which government institutions act as political finance regulators
(PFRs) and which enforcement mechanisms they use. Mechanisms vary from one
jurisdiction to another, but they generally include some or all of the
following:
- Disclosure requirements. Campaigns are required
     to report their contributions, expenditures and all other financial
     transactions, and to produce documentation that substantiates their
     reporting. Compliance with this requirement can be promoted by providing
     training to parties and campaigns.
- Audit. The PFR audits campaign
     reporting and financial documentation to ensure accurate and honest
     disclosure, and to identify potential violations of the law.
- Oversight. External mechanisms
     (e.g. a formal complaints process) allow other electoral participants,
     civil society groups and the public to report suspected political finance
     violations.
- Investigation. The PFR investigates
     potential reporting irregularities, errors or fraud, and/or potential
     violations of the law. The PFR may need the authority to subpoena records,
     obtain the testimony of candidates and witnesses, and gain physical access
     to campaign offices and documents.
- Negotiation. Rather than resorting to
     civil action or criminal prosecution, the PFR may negotiate compliance or
     conciliation agreements with offending campaigns. The PFR may also use alternative dispute resolution.
- Administrative penalties. The PFR may impose sanctions
     in the form of expedited automatic penalties for relatively minor or
     simple violations, or graduated penalties for more serious or complex
     offences.
- Civil action. The PFR may file civil
     actions in either general or specialized courts to enforce political
     finance laws and/or seek monetary relief or injunctions.
- Criminal prosecution. The PFR may seek
     prosecution of potential criminal violations of political finance laws.
A
Role for Civil Society and the Public
Civil society and the public
have a crucial role to play in the effective enforcement of political finance
laws. Non-governmental organizations and the media gather and disseminate
information about political finance laws, publicize violations committed by
electoral participants, and report on enforcement actions taken by the PFR
against the violators. Negative publicity is often a more potent deterrent than
the penalty that ultimately might be levied against a violator.
Non-governmental organizations
and private citizens can also file complaints with the PFR about suspected
political finance violations, conduct investigations of alleged irregularities
or violations, bring third-party legal actions, and mobilize pro-reform
political pressure or support.
Effective
Practices
In every country the enforcement
system is imperfect and represents a work in progress. Nevertheless, certain effective
practices can be identified in effective enforcement.
- The political finance law
     should be clear and unambiguous, requiring political parties and candidates
     to make full financial disclosure and produce supporting documentation.
     The law must state which actions constitute violations, and must specify
     administrative, civil and/or criminal sanctions for offences.
- The law should establish
     an independent political finance regulator, with responsibility for
     administering and enforcing the political finance laws in an impartial and
     politically neutral manner.
- The law should give the
     PFR an oversight role, with authority to review and audit the financial
     reporting of candidates and parties, and to investigate them when
     necessary.
- The law should grant the
     PFR the authority and jurisdiction to enforce the law by imposing
     monetary, electoral or criminal sanctions on offenders at the
     administrative, civil or criminal level.
- The political finance
     legal system should allow and encourage the participation of civil society
     and the public in publicizing political finance issues, providing
     oversight and enforcing the law.
- The law should
     institutionalize incentives such as public funding/subsidies to political
     parties and/or candidates, but it should also allow for these incentives
     to be limited or withheld as a sanction.