Overview

Political finance accountability and reform has emerged as a new area of democracy development programming by non-governmental organizations (NGOs), political reformers, academics, and bilateral assistance agencies that have traditionally assisted or funded elections and political process programming. Evidence of this interest is demonstrated by funding initiatives from the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and the Department for Foreign International Development (DFID) as well as programming initiatives from such NGOs as the Carter Center and the Open Society Institute. Inter-governmental organizations such as the Organization of American States (OAS) and International IDEA are also developing programming in this topical area. In keeping with the trend IFES ongoing work with Election Management Bodies (EMBs), civil society organizations, and in anti-corruption work, political finance has emerged as a program priority.

The intention of political finance programming is six fold: 1) to introduce political finance reforms into legislation and practices of public agencies or to reform existing legislation and practice; 2) if political finance regulations exist, to enhance the enforcement of these regulations; 3) to strengthen the capacity of civil society organizations to monitor and report on political finance activities; 4) to conduct civic education programs to enhance the public’s knowledge about political finance activities; 5) to develop methodologies and standards and to conduct research on political finance topics to deepen the information resources and knowledge base on this subject; 6) to help political parties develop diversified and transparent sources of funding and improve standards of party and campaign finance.

Program Rationale
IFES programming addresses seven gaps in political finance process that can be identified:

The Standards Gap
There is a wide divergence among countries and regions in legislative and regulatory approaches to political finance enforcement and transparency. Global baseline standards have still not been established regardless of some initial attempts by different international organizations (e.g. the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe and the Council of Europe).

The Information Gap
Resources are required to access and analyze the data collected by reporting and disclosure entities. Although this source data may be available through government-operated records, its transfer to the NGO community or the academic community is not automatic or free.

The Capacity Gap
Because of the nascence of political finance regulation and reform, the governmental, non-governmental, and academic actors are often ill prepared to fulfill their statutory or charter responsibilities in administration, monitoring, and enforcement creating a climate of breakdown, ineffectiveness, and permissiveness.

The Monitoring and Oversight Gap
Political finance monitoring groups such as Transparency International exist and use often limited available information and monitoring techniques to oversee and report on political account activity. However, such monitoring of political finance reports and activities requires skills that few have and are not traditionally a part of election observation missions. Members of the media and monitoring organizations require training in auditing techniques and tools to identify and conduct journalistic investigations of reporting discrepancies and other issue areas and to provide long-term comparative analysis.

The Transnational Gap
There is currently no systematic effort to monitor, analyze, and develop enforcement mechanisms to retard the impact of cross-border political finance activity. Criminal interests that can bankroll political campaigns or establish their own political parties with anonymity may particularly expose small and weak states with inexpensive but non-transparent electoral processes to take-over.

The Advocacy Gap
While limited media reporting, organizational monitoring and academic analyzes exist, little effort is made by in-country groups to transform this information into meaningful and informed change. Government, media, and civil society actors often fail to share information nor do they effectively utilize available information. When reform does occur, it often fails to take into account the information needed to affect real lasting change.

IFES Program Response
IFES’ Money & Politics (MAP) and Training in Detection and Enforcement (TIDE) Programs encourage accountability of elected officials, candidates, and political parties and organizations through legal and procedural reform, information technology, training, and public information that promotes (a) the transparency of publicly-disclosed, detailed, and accurate political finance information and (b) accuracy of the information through monitoring, enforcement, and oversight (c) openness and accountability of political process.

IFES’ partners in the MAP and TIDE Programs include political finance regulatory agencies such as election management bodies, government auditors and oversight bodies, legislators and other politicians, media, watchdog NGOs, and academics. Each Program is grounded in scientific research, analysis, and performance monitoring and evaluation.

IFES has developed a unique instrument for tracking and analyzing the flow of money in politics. The IFES MAP Database is easily adapted for use by government bodies and NGOs. Accessible on the Internet, the Database brings detailed information to the general public. With appropriate legal and procedural reforms, oversight training and education, and tools such as the Database, the MAP Program will increase transparency and accountability while reducing the possibility for political corruption.

This website provides information on the MAP Program and resources on political finance.


 

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