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The Limits of Regulation: Indirect Party Access to State Resources in Australia and the UK Nicole Bolleyer, University of Exeter & Anika Gauja, University of Sydney Abstract: The way in which political parties use state resources indirectly (for example, parliamentary expenses) receives substantial attention in public debate, particularly when surrounded by perceptions of misuse. However, scholarly studies of resources indirectly available to parties through their functions in the state, how they are used and regulated, are rare. This paper presents an analytical framework that identifies and categorises the range of indirect resources linked to parties’ institutional roles. It locates these resources within a four-fold matrix of regulation, distinguishing regimes that vary in their detail and whether compliance is externally monitored. Undertaking comparative case studies of parliamentary resource use in the UK and Australia, we argue that the blurring of party-political and parliamentary roles can impede the effectiveness of regulatory regimes that democracies adopt, regardless of detail and external enforcement. These findings have important implications for regulatory reforms that seek to constrain parties’ behaviour to depoliticise democratic governance. Key words: regulation, state resources, indirect party funding, governmentopposition dynamics, parliamentary resources. 2 Introduction In many Western democracies, the indirect, party-political use of state resources (for example, using parliamentary staffers for party work) has gained considerable salience over the last decade with citizens becoming increasingly hostile to what are often perceived as illegitimate practices. As a reflection, the comparative study of party-state relations, especially of direct state funding, has been high on the research agenda.1 Nonetheless we still have little systematic insight into the leeway that parties have in different political systems to use monetary and non-monetary resources that are attached to the state in informal ways – access that can intensify incumbency advantages and thereby distort fair competition. Existing cross-national work has tended to focus on specific practices,2 while attempts to cover a variety of resources parties might be able to use (formally and informally) in democracies, in contrast, have been rare (see, for exceptions, Biezen and Kopecký 2007; Nassmacher 2009). This paper presents the tools to analyze indirect access to state resources across resource type and political system. Its usefulness is demonstrated through an in-depth study of parliamentary resource regulation and usage in Australia and the United Kingdom (UK). A comparative analysis covering indirect state funding for political parties and the way in which relevant resources are regulated is crucial to addressing two questions that are as important to the party literature as they are to the comparative study of regulation and regulatory reform. First, how do democratic states try – through means of regulation – to prevent parties from using state resources not earmarked for party-political purposes to their advantage? Second, even in cases where constraining regulation is adopted, is regulation likely to be effective in meeting this goal? There are reasons to be sceptical. Parties – as legislators and main decisionmakers in reform processes – are likely to prefer vague or minimal restrictions on their own behaviour and might collude in implementing mutually beneficial policies, a problem emphasized in the literature on party funding (Katz and Mair 2009; Koss 2011; Feasby 2007; Geddis 2007). The success of such endeavours further presupposes that party-political and institutional functions can be clearly separated 3 through means of regulation, which, in practice, may not be the case (see for example, Birch 2011, 32; Allen 2011). Even when detailed regulation is adopted (e.g. as a response to a scandal to re-establish public confidence), this regulation is likely to leave leeway for political or party-political usage. This affects the likelihood of whether the actual partisan usage is not only considered – by some – as normatively problematic but also recognised as official misconduct (Allen 2011, 213), which is particularly crucial for those who are regulated. Our empirical findings suggest that institutional functions cannot be clearly separated from party-political functions in parliamentary systems. We argue that this connection is particularly pronounced in (although not unique to) parliamentary regimes3 as the government and parliamentary majority form one unit of action and party representatives typically identify less with their institutional roles (e.g. as parliamentarians or government representatives) than with their functional roles (e.g. as part of the ruling majority or the opposition). This not only suggests that depoliticization through regulation has its limits but also that the much observed increasing regulation of party actors (Gauja 2010; Biezen 2004) might be less constraining for them in practice than is commonly assumed. Perhaps more importantly, the broader normative considerations that lie behind the performance of these functions and much of the ethical unease created reveals a conflict not between private and public interests, but between competing legitimate public claims – in this instance the conflict between semi-public (or entirely public, see Epstein 1986, 157; Biezen 2004, 705) partisan interests and institutional resources provided for the wider public good. We first present an analytical scheme to map out the universe of state resources that parties can access directly and indirectly, showing that ‘indirect resources’ are linked to parties’ institutional roles as parliamentarians and governors. We then present a matrix distinguishing four types of regimes that can regulate the use of institutional resources and on this basis assess how parliamentary resources are used and regulated in Australia and the UK. These case studies exemplify the limitations of formal-legal accounts of party-political resource use, even with regard 4 to state resources regulated by precise rules that are enforced externally. The conclusion returns to the normative repercussions of our findings and presents avenues for future research. Locating the Opportunities for Parties to Access State Resources Defining Indirect Resource Use The indirect access to or ‘extra-legal’ use of state resources by political parties implies that resources can be used for party-political purposes although they are not earmarked for it. Extra-legal practices do not necessarily or clearly violate any legal rules. More often, they only violate the ‘spirit of the law’, considered to be problematic in terms of legitimacy rather than legality. Outright violations of legal requirements that would qualify as corrupt practices are not the main focus of this study. Instead, our focus is on how political parties operate within the given regulatory framework, and how far party behaviour might include the exploitation of unintended or potentially inevitable ambiguities or ‘grey zones’. Mapping the Access to Direct and Indirect Party Resources To map out the range of relevant resources potentially available to parties or partisan organisations, we need to consider not only monetary payments but also funding received by parties ‘in kind’ such as access to free broadcasting (e.g. Biezen 2003; Casas-Zamora 2005; Nassmacher 2009). Previous research has shown that the monetary value of these resources in Australia and the UK constitutes between 5070 per cent of total party income – a significant source when compared to donations, direct state funding and membership fees (Gauja 2013, 130). In the following, we distinguish whether the use of a resource is explicitly earmarked for party-political purposes or not. Finally, we distinguish four types of roles through which political parties can access resources – societal, electoral, parliamentary and governmental – which help us to locate the spheres of party activity within which indirect, i.e. informal, resource usage is most prominent.4 5 Table 1 illustrates that the possibility of accessing state resources indirectly tends to be tied to parties’ institutional roles (parliamentary or governmental, shaded quadrants) rather than their societal or electoral functions, which most direct party funding facilitates. [TABLE 1 HERE] Our analysis focuses on the lower four shaded boxes covering resources accessed informally and thus indirectly, where party access is perceived as most problematic, i.e. where resources are not supposed to be used for party-political purposes or, alternatively, where a resource is supposed to be used for other purposes. While in the latter case the conflict is less pronounced as long as the party-political use still allows for the official goal to be met, both practices are normatively contested: be it because it is generally considered an abuse of public privilege or because it violates the norms of fair competition. Indirect access to state resources usually presupposes that parties occupy institutional positions (e.g. they hold parliamentary seats or control government ministries), which means that parties without such access are systematically disadvantaged. The party-political usage of government resources is not per se seen as more problematic than the usage of parliamentary resources or vice versa, since both situations violate the same norm: the former can create imbalances in the competition between government and parliamentary parties, the latter between parties inside and outside parliament. Whether governmental or parliamentary resource use is the more relevant unit for analysis and the extent to which each practice is (more or less) problematic needs to be judged in relation to its institutional and systemic context. In ‘high threshold countries’ where the entry of new parties into parliament is difficult, the partisan exploitation of institutional resources by parliamentary parties can be considered as particularly problematic. Similarly, the more pronounced executive dominance is, the more critical the exploitation of government resources. 6 While these institutionally embedded normative tensions are relevant as such, whether party-political usage constitutes official misconduct depends on the regulatory context in which such activities occur (Allen 2011, 213). If – as a consequence of broadening conceptions of misconduct - regulation aims at separating political from institutional resource usage (Kaye 2005; Allen 2011), officeholders are pushed to separate two interconnected roles both of which aim at the provision of a public good: depoliticized policy-making driven by expertise not by party-political preferences (see for example, Flinders and Buller 2006) and the presentation of distinct, party-political alternatives to citizens, a basic precondition for meaningful party competition (Epstein 1986). While tighter regulation pushes politicians to downplay their partisan orientations while in office, a situation of ‘permanent campaigning’ in contemporary democracies (Farrell and Webb 2000, 106) intensifies the challenges to pursue both goals simultaneously. This is all the more the case since new media technologies empower critical citizens and facilitate public scrutiny. The Tension between Institutional Earmarking and Party-Political Roles: Limits of Regulation If opportunities for the indirect party-political use of state resources are mostly tied to parties’ institutional roles and there is considerable pressure on politicians to use resources to pursue party-political goals alongside their institutional duties, how can resource use be regulated to constrain parties that attempt to gain advantage from their privileged access? Formal legal regulation that seeks to constrain partisan activity tends to be formulated with respect to the institutional purpose for which resource use is permitted. It is founded on the assumption that resources can be allocated to certain functions, yet previous scholarship from both studies of party resources and legislative roles suggests that the distinction between state and party activity is not at all clear-cut. Birch (2011, 32), for instance, argues that keeping the roles of party and government actors separate ‘is notoriously difficult at the best of times, and it is fair to say that even in the most democratic of states, the line 7 between state resources and party resources is a fine one’. As an example of the difficulty of resolving what could be conceptualized as competing public claims, although most states do have complex regulations restricting the party-political use of state resources, Birch notes that ‘one of the most common forms of electoral malpractice is the violation of such regulations, or where detailed regulations do not exist, the violation of the norm of the separation of state and political resources’ (2011, 32). To the extent that this ‘norm of separation’ is built upon an assumption that partisan and institutional (parliamentary and governmental) roles are distinct; formal regulation faces limits. Scholars working within the sub-discipline of legislative studies have consistently noted the interdependence of party and parliamentary government (Heidar and Koole 2000; Beer 1965), the importance of parties in shaping debate in an arena legislature (Polsby 1975) and the significant impact of party affiliation on perceptions of parliamentary roles (see for example, Rush and Giddings 2011; Cowley 2002; Damgaard 1997; Andeweg 1997). The impact of such socialisation is to undercut the clear distinction between party and parliamentary representative not only in the mind of the parliamentarian, but in their everyday activities.5 This does not suggest that the nature of the regime adopted to regulate resource usage is irrelevant. What we argue, however, is that neither on the level of office-holders’ perceptions, the normative level of competing public claims, nor on an operational, regulatory level – the dimension we are exploring in this paper – institutional and party-political functions can be distinguished free of ambiguity. Regulating Resource Use To assess the extent to which the party-political use of the institutional resources listed in Table 1 is constrained or not, we need to systematize the regulatory frameworks applying to each resource. Drawing on Francis (1993), we conceptualise regulation broadly as a set of rules and mechanisms designed to constrain certain types of activity in order to promote the public good. We consider two core features 8 of regulatory frameworks that are stressed in studies of party finance regulation (Nassmacher 2003). These are: (a) the specificity of the earmarking (is the resource use clearly defined or is it left vague or open?), and (b), the presence of external regulators to monitor whether existing rules are implemented and to sanction misconduct, or whether the monitoring is left to self-regulation. 6 Thus, the characteristics of the different regulatory regimes can be conceptualised as a fourfield matrix as displayed in Table 2. While previous studies (such as Nassmacher 2003, 10-12) have developed more detailed classifications that explore countryspecific regulatory strategies reflecting different combinations of core values (e.g. autonomy or transparency), our matrix aims at providing categories able to specify the nature of regulation applied to individual resources across different systemic contexts. [TABLE 2 HERE] The matrix highlights the two key regulatory tools (the type of monitoring and the specificity of regulation) that combine to produce varying levels of constraint. A combination of the detailed specification of resource use and the external monitoring of regulations produces what might be termed a ‘constraining regime’. Here the opportunity for indirect resource use would be most limited. This is because officially recognised misconduct (rather than the exposure of merely improper behaviour) is most likely, which – following Allen’s specification – presupposes clear rules, their actual and observed violation and finally the investigation and confirmation by an officially recognised actor (2011, 213). The combination of self-regulation and broad specification conversely creates a ‘selfrestraining regime’, in which parties would have most leeway. While party-political usage – if revealed – might be considered unacceptable, official sanctions are unlikely. Between these two types lie two mixed regimes. Political parties operating in an institutionally constraining regime are constrained by an external body in charge of monitoring resource usage but can exploit the ambiguities associated with resource specification in an environment of regulatory ‘reasonableness’ that avoids unduly prescriptive rules. Constraints result less from the risks of engaging in actual 9 violations than the public exposure of illegitimate practices by an independent regulator. Parties operating within functionally constraining regimes, in effect, monitor themselves and thus may choose not to police resource use, even if it specified or regulated in some detail. Officially recognised misconduct is less likely in practice under the latter regime that lacks external monitoring, but actual exposure is more severe if it occurs, since parties are more likely to violate rules. Methods and Case Selection Regulatory frameworks that govern the use of institutional resources are specified based on primary documents (government publications, publications by the institution allocating the resource or the regulators in charge, etc. – for details see the Appendix). When it comes to studying parties’ actual handling of these institutional resources, a number of methodological issues arise. As this research involves examining practices that might be categorised as improper, we have relied as far as possible on documentary analysis (e.g. commission reports revealing problematic practices or reports by regulators evaluating compliance with existing regulations), complemented by 15 semi-structured elite interviews with regulators, experts and party representatives from the UK and Australia.7 Due to the sensitivity of the practices involved, questions asked of party representatives were couched in neutral terms, and sought to clarify procedures and obtain information on the sorts of activities undertaken rather than employing an a priori categorisation of resource types and flows. Both Australia and the UK have long tended to use self-restraining regimes. While Australia has only undertaken marginal changes (despite public criticism), the UK has experienced a distinct change in its regulatory framework over the last decade, moving towards more constraining regimes (e.g. Flinders 2009; Allen 2010). These differences (see Table 3 below) allow us to examine how the adoption of more constraining regulatory regimes impacts on partisan practices. At the same time, the two cases share basic similarities in their political cultures and a growing 10 disenchantment amongst the public with political parties and the institutions of formal politics. Unlike ‘party states’ such as Austria, there is a clear separation between political parties and the state apparatus (Kopecký et al. 2012). A functional division between government (usually supported by a parliamentary majority) and its parliamentary opposition tends to dominate political processes in parliamentary regimes generally (Lijphart 1999), which, as argued earlier, affects parliamentarians’ self-understanding and the extent to which they identify with institutional as compared to party-political roles. However, in classical Westminster democracies government-opposition dynamics are particularly pronounced as a consequence of party system dynamics that are usually shaped by two major parties competing for government (Rhodes et al. 2009, 71-4). This intense blurring of roles creates tensions when resources are formally earmarked for institutional usage, which should reinforce grey zones that already exist on the regulatory level, even if a constraining regime is put into place. While such tensions are widespread across democracies, both the UK and Australia are settings that should reveal possible limits of the various regulatory regimes adopted with particular clarity, which makes their study methodologically advantageous. Assessing the Regulation of Indirect Access Opportunities through Parliament in Australia and the UK As presented in Table 2, regulatory regimes can be classified according to whether the use of resources is self-monitored or monitored externally. To qualify as external regulation in operational terms, monitoring of resource use should not be undertaken by an institution through which parties access the resource in the first place, or by an institution that is formally or de facto controlled by parties. The specificity of the regulation refers to the level of detail that is ascribed to how a resource can be used. In operational terms, regulation qualifies as specific if the functional specification of institutionally defined usage8 is further developed either through inclusion or exclusion (e.g. through a listing of activities or more specific purposes that constitute ‘parliamentary business’ or a listing of activities or purposes 11 that are excluded from it and are therefore prohibited, or both).9 On that basis, Table 3 gives an overview of the types of regulation that apply to resources available to parliamentary and government actors in the UK and Australia. [TABLE 3 HERE] Table 3 reveals notable differences in how party-political access to these resources is regulated. In the UK, a considerable range of resources is regulated through constraining regimes. At present, except for the tithing of parliamentary salaries (an intra-organizational party practice), parliamentary research facilities, estate facilities and subsidies (all collective parliamentary resources), no other resources operate under a self-restraining regime. In contrast, we find disinclination towards constraining regimes in Australia. Only one of the resources falls in the most constraining category, government advertising – which came under new regulations and the oversight of the Auditor General in 2008. How Parties Use Parliamentary Resources: The Practical Limits of Regulation in Australia and the UK The following case studies highlight the discrepancy between normative aspirations of regulation and strategic partisan behaviour. A qualitative case study approach is most suitable to achieve this, assuring access to information on informal practices, while doing justice to our interest in the nature of resource usage requiring in-depth study (Gerring 2007, 48-50). We focus on parliamentary resources attached to the first house of parliament to increase comparability across contexts. Where insightful, we contrast current regulations and their consequences with the system in place before. As access to parliamentary resources concerns all political parties with parliamentary representation, not just governing parties, their analysis has broader implications for indirect resource usage by political parties generally. Furthermore, Table 3 illustrated that the type of regulatory regime is not systematically linked to a resource being allocated to parliamentary or governmental functions. A focus on 12 parliamentary resources will therefore not bias our analyses. We discuss two types of resources that are earmarked for ‘parliamentary business’ and exist in both systems: those supporting MPs’ communications with citizens and staffing resources that, more broadly, help MPs to meet their parliamentary functions. Although we find parliamentary group subsidies only in the UK, we include an assessment of ‘Short Money’ because it is an important income source where direct state funding is, compared to other democracies, meagre.10 The debate around this resource and the way it is regulated reveals with particular clarity the overlap of institutional and political functions – a challenge apparent in a number of European democracies (for example, Nassmacher 2009; Sickinger 2009). Table 4 sums up how each of these resources is regulated and the leeway for partypolitical use detected in the case studies. The analysis shows, overall, that the adoption of a functionally constraining regime instead of a self-restraining one appears not to make much of a difference in terms of the leeway for party-political usage. Furthermore, while constraining regimes impose limits to what parties can do with institutional resources, these regulations are by no means watertight either. [TABLE 4 HERE] The Use of Parliamentary Resources Regulated by a Self-Restraining Regime In Australia, all parliamentary resources are regulated through a functionally constraining regime or a self-restraining one. Guidelines and regulations that relate to MPs’ use of allowances and entitlements are issued by the Special Minister of State and the Department of Finance, and are framed by a legislative regime set by the parliament itself. While Ministerial and Parliamentary Services officers may assist parliamentarians in advising and voluntarily checking entitlement use, ‘it remains the responsibility of the Senator or Member to satisfy themselves that their use of their entitlements is lawful’ and to ‘satisfy themselves that their use is publicly defensible’ (Australian Government 2010, 8). 13 One example that falls within the self-restraining regime is parliamentary and electorate staffing. All MPs are entitled to hire four members of staff, with additional staff allocated to party leaders and MPs with large electorates. Restrictions are placed upon Ministers employing family members under the Standards of Ministerial Ethics code (s 2.18), however these do not apply more broadly to MPs. The MP is entirely responsible for hiring staff, and no restrictions are placed on the additional employment activities of part time and casual workers, who are also free to work for a political party.11 While support for the constituency office and case work falls clearly within the remit of ‘parliamentary business’, the line is more difficult to draw in the case of researchers who might support the drafting of policy proposals, in effect, party policy. It is considered – among regulators and parliamentary actors – normal practice that MPs hire party supporters for these posts. This does not only mean that access to parliamentary staff can function as reward for loyal party workers but also that staffers’ engagement in party activities as private citizens is likely to blur the line between support for the MP as parliamentarian and as party politicians even more. In the UK some resources continue to be regulated by self-restraining regimes, especially parliamentary resources provided to MPs collectively. UK ‘Short Money’ was introduced in 1974 to enable opposition parties to more effectively fulfil their parliamentary functions. 12 In 2010/11 the two biggest opposition parties, the Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats received £2,841,498.00 and £889,762.00 respectively. Labour received £3,702,558.00 after the 2010 elections.13 Compared to payments made since 2000 to the organizations of the major parties for policy development administered by the Electoral Commission which total £2,000,000.00, parliamentary subsidies clearly constitute the more important source of income.14 This resource does not even out the imbalance between the executive and the legislature as institutional actors, but between government and opposition, which are politically defined roles. It also rests on the recognition that parties indeed profit resource-wise once taking over government (e.g. ministerial support, special advisors) – otherwise the financial support accorded to opposition parties to even 14 out the government’s resource access would be difficult to defend. The money, in effect, flows into general party budgets, most visible in the case of the Conservative Party, whose Short Money is directly transferred to the House to the Conservative Party headquarters, not to the parliamentary party as in Labour or in the Liberal Democrats. ‘Parliamentary business’ is not unspecified as such, yet as Ewing, serving as an expert witness at a hearing of the Select Committee on Public Administration, put it: ‘we have a definition of parliamentary business which does not include the words “Parliament” or “House of Commons”, which seems to be an extra-ordinary omission in terms of the use of the money’.15 Article 3(1) of the Short Money resolution of 26 May 1999 declares that ‘financial assistance shall be available for the costs necessarily incurred in the running of the Leader of the Opposition’s Office’, which in practice means the hiring of press officers and other support staff. While the regulation qualifies as specific in the sense that it indeed details ‘parliamentary business’, it does so referring to opposition parties’ political role rather than institutionally defined functions. This means the regulation cannot be functionally constraining with regard to parliamentarians’ attempts to use institutional resources for party-political purposes and thus does not qualify as specific regulation in line with our earlier operationalization. As constitutive for a self-restraining regime, there are no effective monitoring requirements in place that check whether boundaries have been crossed. Unlike MPs’ expenses (now regulated by IPSA) or the policy development grant scheme (administered by the Electoral Commission), Short Money is handled in the House of Commons. More specifically, auditors hired by the individual parties provide a report to the House’s Fees Office confirming that the party spent more money on parliamentary business than it received in terms of Short Money, which obviously is different from checking how Short Money has been used, as minutes of hearings of the auditors of the three main parties by the Select Committee on Public Administration indicate.16 While the HoC Fees Office simply files the submitted reports and is no active monitor, the independent auditors base their judgement on 15 further specifications of ‘parliamentary business’ provided to them by their employer – the parties. Interestingly, a former report of the Public Administration Select Committee (2001) indicated that Short Money de facto constitutes – despite being framed as institutional support – a political resource to hire staff, comparable to the resources of government to hire special advisers (which are regulated by a functionally constraining, i.e. stricter, regime). This became most visible in the Committee’s recommendation that Short Money and special advisors should be paid for from the same fund.17 The Use of Parliamentary Resources Regulated by a Functionally Constraining Regime An example of a parliamentary resource regulated by a functionally constraining regime is the provision of the printing and communications allowance to Australian MPs. Although earmarking is specific unlike in the two cases just discussed, flexible party-political usage on behalf of parties can be identified, reflecting a lack of external monitoring. MPs are provided with the costs of commercially printing, communicating and distributing information for parliamentary or electorate purposes, in both hard copy and/or electronic format (including establishing and maintaining websites).18 The principal purpose of the entitlement is to facilitate their duties as an elected representative of their constituents (ANAO 2009, 17), and must not be used for party business or the production of how to vote material. Party business is defined as: ‘the production, communication of material that: is, or contains, how-to-vote material; or solicits subscriptions or other financial support for a member, political party or candidate’.19 MPs intending to use their entitlement to print and communicate material may submit a copy of the proposed material to Ministerial and Parliamentary services (a subdivision of the Department of Finance) prior to printing, which will be ‘assessed against the parameters of the printing and communications entitlement’ (Australian Government 2010, 55). However, this is a voluntary measure. 16 A report on parliamentary entitlements by the Australian National Audit Office found that the use of the printing entitlement for election campaigning activities ‘was apparent from both the nature of the items printed using the entitlement in the period leading up to, and during the 2007 election campaign’ (ANAO 2009, 29). To determine the extent to which parliamentarians were acting outside the scope of their entitlements the ANAO took a sample of materials printed using the Printing Allowance. 74% of the items reviewed (with a value of $4.64 million) were at varying levels of risk of being outside entitlement. Examples included items ‘with high levels of material promoting party political interests and/or directly attracting or scorning the views, policies or actions of others, such as the policies and opinions of other parties’ (ANAO 2009, 36-7). Reference was made to the ongoing and usual practice for MPs’ printing materials to be strategically coordinated and to involve the ‘consistent delivery of campaign messages and themes’, evidenced by party-wide advertising strategies, common text and artwork designed to promote the interests of the party and the use of a limited number of printing firms (ANAO 2009, 206-7). The Use of Parliamentary Resources Regulated by a Constraining Regime While none of the parliamentary resources in Australia fall under a constraining regulatory regime, constraining regimes have gained considerable prominence in the UK. Looking at two resources falling in this most constraining category, we again find leeway for party-political usage. Starting with what is now called the Office Costs Expenditure, it is useful to look back at how resources for communication were regulated before IPSA. Up to 2007 there had been no sufficient specifications on how, for instance, newsletters (that were financed by the existing allowance for office running costs, the Incidental Expenses Provision Allowance) were used by parliamentarians to communicate with citizens in relation to their parliamentary duties (Kelly 2010b, 5-6). Nor was the use of free postage clearly specified. Interviewees indicated that former House staff considered many activities as crossing the boundaries of parliamentary business, e.g. parties sent their MPs material to be included in their newsletters, behaviour that was rarely picked up. Considering MPs as underpaid, House staff widely saw MPs as entitled to 17 use their allowances to the full (Allen 2011). Before allowances were regulated by IPSA, the House of Commons Committee on Standards and Privileges (now the Standards Committee) was alone in charge of handling parliamentary misconduct.20 Back in 2006, to give one example, the Committee on Standards and Privileges rejected as inappropriate the conduct of an MP who included party political material in his annual report that was sent out using the Incidental Expenses Allowance (Johnston and Pattie 2009, 582). That said, the Committee usually found it difficult to respond to the misuse of allowances involving a conflict of roles between ‘the MPas-Member-of-Parliament’ and the ‘MP-as-Party-Politician’. 100 critical reports published by the Committee from 1995-2010 contained a total of 181 adverse findings. Only 25 concerned the political misuse of allowances, of which only four qualified as serious (Allen 2011, 223-228). In 2007, the UK Parliamentary Communication Allowance was introduced, designed to assist MPs to communicate with the public on ‘parliamentary business’. It was set at £10,000 per MP, rising to £10,400 in 2008-09. Since the scheme was heavily contested, stricter regulations were discussed already in summer 2008 and a Revised Green Book and Audit of Members’ Allowances was published in January 2009. New measures attempted to more effectively prevent resource use for campaigning, e.g. the use of the allowance was prohibited 28 days before polling day, as was the display of party logos or campaign slogans on newsletters. This functionally constraining regime was abolished in the wake of the expenses scandal and replaced by a constraining regime. The current allowance for Office Costs Expenditure – the resource MPs can use for communication with citizens is monitored by IPSA, an external regulator for MP expenses created in 2009. As indicated by IPSA staff, the fundamental problem that parliamentarians’ institutional and party-political roles are inevitably intertwined remains. The regulator does not consider it part of its role to develop a workable distinction, which points to the practical limitations in preventing the usage of institutional resources that might be considered inappropriate, especially facing heightened public sensitivities. While active campaigning is strictly prohibited 18 (newsletters, for instance, are no longer allowed under the current scheme), borderline cases are inevitable (e.g. in the case of the public financing of MPs’ websites). The limitations inherent in constraining regulatory regimes become even clearer when considering the Staff Expenditure21 available to members of the House of Commons, also a resource within the remit of IPSA. Office support was introduced in 1969 starting with an allowance of £500 per MP and rose to £103,812.00 in 2009 (Lightbown and Smith 2009, 57-58). For most of its existence, the allowance was administered by the House, as with most other allowances. Before IPSA was created, complaints were brought forward to the Committee of Standards and Privileges that part-time parliamentary staff were employed by the MP’s party for the rest of the time, a practice that was criticized but is still nothing unusual nowadays. This is possible since party-political usage of staff is predominantly debated in terms of what parliamentary assistants ought to do, not who these assistants ought to be.22 IPSA specifies the parliamentary functions staff can deal with, provides a model contract and monitors regulations but MPs are still in charge of their staff. They are able to reward former party workers by providing them access to positions as far as they professionally qualify for the role. While having staff committed to the same political goals might be politically sensible, it blurs the line between the institutional and political spheres, which regulation aims at separating. In the wake of the expenses scandal the proposal was debated that – to circumvent such grey zones – staff should be hired by the House rather than being controlled by MPs individually. This proposal, however, was not adopted, leading to a leeway for party-political use similar to that which we identified in Australia, where staffing is regulated by a functionally constraining regime. Conclusions The way in which political parties use state resources indirectly (for example, parliamentary expenses, staffing allowances and political appointments) receives 19 substantial attention in public debate, particularly when surrounded by perceptions of abuse or misuse. In an era of new media technology driven by critical citizens and increased scrutiny, public sensitivities are considerable, not only when it comes to illegal practices such as corruption. The use of institutional resources by parties and their representatives tends to be perceived as violating norms of fair competition and the separation of institutionally earmarked and political resources. Despite the considerable salience of the issue, we find many studies on direct state funding granted to parties in advanced democracies but only few on indirect resource usage providing a broader picture on the range of sources available for indirect party-political usage in a democracy. In a first attempt to address this gap, we mapped out the types of institutional resources parties can access indirectly in Australia and UK and examined how each state tries – through different regulatory regimes – to prevent parties from using institutional resources not earmarked for party-political purposes to their advantage and whether regulation is effective. We specified the types of regimes regulating individual resources, distinguishing regimes according to their precision in specifying the type of usage permitted and the structures set up for monitoring. This typology, given its focus on the regulation of individual resources (rather than starting out from a particular systemic context) is applicable to a range of legislatures and political systems. To exemplify the tensions and discrepancies between the normative aspirations of regulation and strategic party-political behaviour, we then presented case studies of the actual usage of parliamentary resources in Australia and the UK. In these two settings, where parliamentarians strongly identify with their functional role as part of the governmental majority or its opposition, we found that despite varying regulatory regimes applicable to the various parliamentary resources, both monetary and nonmonetary resources were capable of exploitation. Leeway for party-political use existed, even if constraining regimes were adopted. This finding has broader repercussions. The success of regulatory reforms driven by the increasing criticism of parties’ exploitation of public privileges and a growing 20 desire to see ‘governing’ depoliticized presupposes that party-political functions and institutional functions can be clearly separated through means of regulation, which our findings put into doubt - at the least in systems where government-opposition dynamics dominate political decision-making. This, in turn, implies practical barriers against a depolitization of parliamentary politics, that some see as a means to reestablish citizen confidence in modern government. The different regulatory approaches applicable to different resources in a system (particularly more constraining regimes) are unlikely to be effective unless they, and the associated policy prescriptions, are driven by the awareness that when trying to regulate informal resource use, preventing unfair competition is only one dimension to be considered. Party representatives in public office need to reconcile competing public claims linked to their role as law-makers and governors and to their role as party politicians representing political alternatives to citizens. Hence, the increasing use of detailed reporting and disclosure requirements needs to be accompanied by a public discussion of what constitutes informal use and which of these possibly competing goals the regulation of resources ought to achieve. Our research findings also imply that the intensifying regulatory constraints imposed on parties in advanced democracies, which some consider as a form of state encroachment, might have less of an effect on their behaviour than is sometimes assumed. This is the case not only because parties may deliberately refrain from attempts to specify ‘parliamentary business’ in such a way that institutional and political purpose could be sensibly distinguished (Short Money in the UK) or because functionally constraining specifications are violated in practice because no effective monitoring is in place (the communications allowance in Australia). Even if constraining regimes are adopted with the goal to implement a clear-cut distinction between institutional and political functions, some leeway for party-political usage tends to remain (UK Staff Expenditures). Various studies we referred to throughout this article suggest that similar problems have been observed in other types of political systems. Whether the challenges of regulating political resource usage are relatively less pronounced in presidential or consensus democracies (where partisan identities might be weaker and institutional ones stronger) rather than in the 21 majoritarian democracies analyzed here needs to be addressed in future research, which might also look at differences in the institutional or political context as well as types of resource regulation (which this article focused on). What seems to be clear though is that with continued access to financial resources well in excess of those obtained through membership subscriptions and direct state funding, the future of political parties appears to be tied ever more closely to their parliamentary and governmental roles. While this paper did not aim to account for the respective choices in favour of particular regimes through which the use of state resources is regulated in advanced democracies, it proposed a way to systematize the variety of these choices within and across countries. We found that in Australia and the UK institutional resources are regulated with different levels of strictness, the readiness to engage in reform away from self-restraining solutions was much more pronounced in the UK. There, public pressure and disillusionment was particularly intense after the expenses scandal, which constituted an important trigger for reform. However, a trend towards more constraining regulation of both the use of government and of parliamentary resources has been under way since the 1990s (Allen 2010; 2011; Flinders 2009), which suggests that such reforms should not be considered as isolated responses to individual scandals. Clearly, the variety of regulatory choices elites make in democracies and the different pathways they choose to respond to public criticism constitutes a challenge for future research. To address these challenges, future research needs to systematize regulatory differences across a wider range of democracies than was possible in this paper. It especially needs to consider variations in institutional and party system configurations, which we deliberately minimized in order to be able to compare the practical implications of differences in resource regulation rather than political system. More encompassing comparisons that study ‘regulatory choice’ (rather than ‘regulatory effect’) could then provide the foundation for a study of the general conditions and the specific triggers that push political elites to adopt more constraining regimes that might reduce their room for manoeuvre. 22 1 See, for instance, Biezen 2003, Casas-Zamora 2005; Fisher 2010; Fisher et al. 2009; Pinto-Duschinsky 2002; Nassmacher 2003; Pierre et al. 2000, Scarrow 2006; 2007. 2 Examples are comparative studies of party patronage (e.g. Kopecký et al. 2012), of the tithing of MPs’ salaries (e.g. Bolleyer and Gauja 2013) or the use of special advisers (e.g. King 2003). 3 For analyses of this problem in presidential regimes, see for example Thompson 1995 and Kaye 2005. In consensus democracies, see Nassmacher 2009 and Sickinger 2009. 4 In most advanced democracies the interests of representatives and their parties are closely aligned, which is why we do not distinguish individual from collective resources (e.g. MPs’ allowances vs. subsidies for party groups) in our analytical mapping. That said, there are configurations (e.g. of high intra-party competition (Ireland), or organizationally very weak parties (US)) where a conceptualization of (potential) party access as a two-step process might be useful (e.g. one resource transfer from state to parliamentarian and one from parliamentarian to party), since parliamentarians – when using resources to pursue their interests – cannot be assumed to, by doing so, pursue party interests as well. 5 This intersection of institutional and political roles and the resulting conflict in the provision of different public goods underpins Thompson’s concept of ‘institutional corruption’. This concept, developed in the US context, denotes behaviour such as a Congressman’s tendency to represent the interests of those constituents with particular eagerness who are also party donors (which in contrast to the raising of campaign funds is normatively problematic). Such conduct is difficult to pin down because ‘it is so closely related to conduct that is a perfectly acceptable part of political life’ (Thompson 1995, 7). This parallel further suggests that the tensions between the demands of institutional and political roles provide the foundation for normatively problematic behaviour (and the regulatory challenges they imply) exist as much in presidential as in parliamentary regimes. 6 We do not distinguish between regulation that is legally sanctioned and regulation that is not as a main classificatory criterion because the distinction is – for our purposes - not particularly telling. While some codes of conduct have a statutory basis, this does not imply that a new offence is created; one that could function as a particular threat in case of its violation (e.g. the code of conduct for Special Advisors in the UK). Vice versa, even if rules lack legal status their violation can still have severe consequences. Parliamentary expenses in the UK were regulated by internal House of Commons rules (the ‘Green Book’) until the Parliamentary Standards Act made it an offence to provide false or misleading statements regarding expenses claims. The revelations in the 2009 expenses scandal created such public outrage that MPs were prosecuted for false accounting under criminal law. The crucial questions - when characterizing the regulatory environment - therefore are whether it is clear what a violation is (level of specificity) and whether they are likely to be revealed (type of monitoring). 7 These interviews were conducted between 2009 and 2011 with representatives from the Department of Finance, the Office of the Special Minister for State, and the Department of Parliamentary Services (Australia) representatives of the Committee for Standards in Public Life, the Inter-Parliamentary Standards Authority (IPSA), the UK Electoral Commission, the HoC Standards and Privileges Committee, former staff of the HoC support facilities and party representatives (UK). These interviews were mostly recorded (in a few cases interviewees preferred us to rely on handwritten notes) and lasted on average 45 minutes. Anonymity was assured to interviewees due to the sensitivity of the issues discussed. To promote accuracy, information on practices of resource usage were triangulated either across different types of actors (e.g. party representative and regulator) or across different types of sources (e.g. interview material and official reports assessing rule compliance) (Aberbach and Rockman 2002). 8 Detailed regulation of resource use that lists purposes, however that also, explicitly allows for political usage as well, naturally would not qualify as ‘specific’ under this definition, since the operationalization aims at capturing the specificity of constraints on party-political usage. More fundamentally, if resource usage is unregulated in the first place, actors, by definition, operate – in terms of the level of external constraints - under a ‘self-restraining regime’. 9 Another example of the detailed specification of a resource can be found in the regulations governing ‘Householders’ (mail-outs sent by parliamentarians to their constituents) by the Canadian House of Commons in its Members’ By-Law (ss 7, 29). 10 Income through the Policy Development Fund is comparatively minor. 23 11In the 2007-2008 financial year, the total cost of parliamentary staffing was $173.56 million, comprised of $148.21 million on salaries and $25.35 million on staff travels and allowances (Horne 2009, 18). 12 The equivalent in the House of Lords is Cranbourne Money, introduced in 1996. 13 Also the DUP, SNP, PC and SDLP and since most recently the Greens receive Short Money. See for details (Kelly 2010a, 15-16). 14 2009-10 the money was divided between seven parties. Labour and the Liberal Democrats each received £457,324. The Conservatives received £434,580 (Electoral Commission 2013). 15 Select Committee on Public Administration, Examination of Witnesses (Questions 720-735), Ms. Margaret McDonagh, Professor Keith Ewing, Mr David Prior MP, Mr Stuart Harris, Mr. Nigel Bliss and Mr Ben Williams, Wednesday 15 November 2000. 16 Select Committee on Public Administration, Examination of Witnesses (Questions 577-599), Mr. Brian Taylor, Mr. Robert Blair and Mr. Robert Ward, Wednesday 15 November 2000. 17 The comment is as follows: ‘The Committee saw strong parallels between the money spent on special advisers and the financial assistance given to opposition party for the conduct of their parliamentary business (known as Short Money). The Committee recommended that consideration should be given to the establishment of a separate fund, for the support both of special advisers who cannot be appointed under Civil Service rules and for disbursement of Short Money’ (Public Administration Select Committee 2001). 18 For the 2010-11 financial year (based on parties’ seat share), this allowance amounted to $10.6m each for the ALP and Liberal/National Coalition and $491,000 for the Greens. 19 Regulation 3AA of the Parliamentary Entitlements Regulations 1997. 20 While IPSA has taken over main responsibilities in the area of MPs’ expenses, the Standards Committee is still in charge of cases of misuses of parliamentary estate. 21 Up to 2009 it was called the staffing allowance, up to 2001 the Office Cost Allowance (Lightbown and Smith 2009). 22 This leaves aside some constraints regarding the hiring of relatives that apply to both British MPs and Australian Ministers, a restriction that is not directed to the prevention of party-political use. 24 Acknowledgements: The research for this paper has received funding from the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia (International Science Linkages Program) and the European Research Council under the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) / ERC grant agreement n° 335890 STATORG. 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Available online at http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200607/cmselect/cmstnprv/4 31/43102.htm 30 Table 1: Direct and Indirect Party Funding and Parties’ Functional Roles Monetary Resources Non-monetary Resources Direct Access (earmarked for party-political purposes) Indirect Access (not earmarked for partypolitical purposes) Direct State Funding (for election reimbursement or organizational activities) Free Media Access Free Postage for Candidates Benefits associated with Party Registration (e.g. copy of the electoral roll) Compulsory Voting Parliamentary Subsidies Parliamentary Allowances (e.g. for staffing, travel, communication) Tithing of MP Salaries Parliamentary Facilities (e.g. research units, IT, library) and Resources (e.g. free postage for MPs) Budget for Government Advertising Ministerial Allowances (e.g. for staffing, travel, communication) Tithing of Ministerial Salaries Appointments (political and meritocratic) Ministerial Bureaucracy Linked to Societal and Electoral Roles Linked to Parliamentary Roles Linked to Governmental Roles 31 Table 2: Four Types of Regulatory Environments Self-regulation External regulation No/Broad Specification of Use of Institutional Resource Self-restraining Regime Institutionally Constraining Regime Detailed Specification of Institutional Resource Functionally Constraining Regime Constraining Regime 32 Table 3: Regulation of Indirect Resource Use in Australia and the UK Self-Regulation Self-restraining Regime No/Broad Specification of Use of Institutional Resource Detailed Specification of Use of Institutional Resource UK - Elected Officials’ Salaries (Tithing) - Parliamentary Estate Facilities - Parliamentary Research Facilities - Parliamentary Subsidies -------------------------------------------Australia - Elected Officials’ Salaries (Tithing) - Parliamentary Research Facilities - Electorate Office Allowance - Electorate Employees Allowance - Special Advisers Functionally Constraining Regime UK - Special Advisers - Government Advertisement - Public Appointments (no parliamentary involvement) --------------------------------------------Australia - Printing and Communications Allowance - Travel Allowance - Public Appointments External Regulation Institutionally Constraining Regime Constraining Regime UK - Parliamentary Allowances (e.g. Office Costs Expenditure, Staff Expenditure) - Public Appointments (parliamentary veto or scrutiny) ------------------------------------------Australia - Government Advertising Note: For details on the main primary sources, see the Appendix. 33 Table 4: The Regulation of Parliamentary Resources and Leeway for Party-Political Usage Regulatory Regime Self-Restraining Resource Institutionally Defined Purpose Leeway for PartyPolitical Use Electorate Employees Allowance (Aul) Staff Support for MPs’ Parliamentary Work Flexible Short Money (UK) Support for Parliamentary Minority to Meet Opposition Function Communication with Citizens Flexible Functionally Constraining Printing and Communication Allowance (Aul) Flexible Constraining Staff Expenditure (UK) Staff Support for MPs’ Parliamentary Work Limited23 Office Costs Expenditure (UK) Communication with Citizens Tightly constrained 34 Appendix: Main Primary Sources used to Classify Regulatory Regimes1 Australia Institutional Resource Nature Regulation of Primary Source(s) Electorate Office Allowance Electorate Employees Allowance Self-restraining Section 4 of, and item 7, Part 1 of Schedule 1 to the Parliamentary Entitlements Act 1990 Self-restraining Special Advisors Printing and Communications Allowance Travel Allowance Self-restraining Functionally constraining Determination 2001/Part IV/1 (Determination Regarding the Employment of Electorate Officers’) made by the then Special Minister of State under the Members of Parliament (Staff) Act 1984; Members of Parliament (Staff) Act 1984 Members of Parliament (Staff) Act 1984 Regulations 3AA(3), (11) of the Parliamentary Entitlements Regulations 1997 Government Appointments Functionally constraining Government Advertising Constraining Functionally constraining Section 4 of, and item 8 of Part 1 of Schedule 1 to the Parliamentary Entitlements Act 1990 and Remuneration Tribunal Determinations 2012/04 (as amended by 2012/15) and 2012/19. Clause 3.1 of Remuneration Tribunal Determination 2012/04 Annex J, ‘Appointments Process’ of the Cabinet Handbook (7th Edition, Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet). ‘Guidelines on Information and Advertising Campaigns by Australian Government Departments and Agencies’(Department of Finance and Deregulation) Relevant secondary source: Horne (2009). 1 Two resources listed in Table 3 are not covered in this sources table. Tithing – representatives regularly and in principle voluntarily donating a fixed share of their salaries to their parties – is an intra-organizational practice. Thus, the regulatory regime is by definition self-restraining because the use of salaries as private property is not ‘institutionally earmarked’. Similarly, parliamentary research facilities, e.g. parliamentary libraries and the Scrutiny Unit in the UK HoC (see Scrutiny Unit 2008), which provide a collective support structure for developing or assessing legislation (a core parliamentary task), is by default self-restraining. Legislation always (at least to some extent) reflects party policy, and regulating the use of resources such as the library or institutional support for doing research to gather information as either a ‘parliamentarian’ or a ‘party politician’ is impossible. 35 United Kingdom Institutional Resource Parliamentary Estate Facilities Short Money Nature of Primary Source(s) Regulation Reg. 5.5, House Banqueting Regulations, 13 December 20002 Self-restraining Functionally constraining Functionally constraining Art 3 (1), Short Money Resolution, 26 May 1999 Art. 4, Code of Conduct for Special Advisors, Cabinet Office June 2010, Constitutional Reform and Governance Act 2010, (8), (11) A Brief Guide to Propriety in Government Functionally Government Communications; Propriety Guidance (Cabinet Advertising constraining Office) The Commission for Public Appointments, Code of Good Government Functionally Practice for Ministerial Appointments to Public Bodies, April 1 Appointments constraining 20123; The Commissioner for Public Appointments: Regulated Public Appointments: What you need to know, November 2009 Annual Review of the MPs’ Scheme of Business Costs and Parliamentary Constraining Expenses: Fourth Ed., April 2012, IPSA. Art. 3.2-3.3 list specific Expenses criteria for resource usage applicable to the expenses regulated under the scheme4 (further details provided when particular expenses discussed) Relevant secondary sources: King (2003); Flinders (2009); Allen (2010); Kelly (2009); (2010); Maer (2011). Special Advisors 2 See also Standards and Privileges Committee (2007). See on this also: Ministry of Justice (2008), Liaison Committee (2008). 4 These include the Office Costs Expenditure, Staff Expenditure, Travel and Subsistence, Accommodation Expenditure, London Area Living Payment, Start-up and Winding-up, Miscellaneous and Financial Assistance. 3 36 23 While regulation is specific and monitoring is strict regarding what staff can do on a contractual basis, the MP still has control over who he or she hires, which opens up the opportunity to use these positions as reward for party work. 37