Short money – funding for UK opposition parties – is silently cut down to size

Last Updated: November 26, 2015By
Sin of omission: Smiling George never mentioned that he is slashing funding for opposition parties without even giving them a say about it.

Sin of omission: Smiling George never mentioned that he is slashing funding for opposition parties without even giving them a say about it.

The Government has moved to make sharp cuts to state funding to Britain’s opposition parties.

So-called “short money”, an annual payment that has been paid to opposition parties since the 1970s, will be cut by 19 per cent subject to parliamentary approval.

Short money is not received by parties in Government and was introduced to allow oppositions to “more effectively fulfil their parliamentary functions”. It is generally used to employ parliamentary staff and meet political office costs.

The cut will affect Labour the most and also take significant chunks of funding from the SNP, Green Party and smaller regional parties.

The cut was not mentioned by George Osborne in his speech to the House of Commons but emerged later when full documentation was released.

The Government says the cost of short money has risen from £6.9 million in 2010-11 to £9.3 million in 2015-16.

Katie Ghose, chief executive of the Electoral Reform Society, which campaigns for democratic reform, said the cut would be likely to damage government accountability.

“The decision to cut public funding for opposition parties by 19% is bad news for democracy. The UK already spends just a tenth of the European average on funding parties,” she said.

“Short Money is designed to level the playing field and ensure that opposition parties can hold the government of the day to account. This cut could therefore be deeply damaging for accountability.”

The unilateral move by the Government to cut the payments is in contrast to the usual consensus approach taken on matters party funding form.

Source: George Osborne quietly cuts funding for all of Britain’s opposition parties | UK Politics | News | The Independent

A Labour spokeswoman said it was an “anti-democratic move” by the Conservatives, accusing the government of “partisan moves to hit their opposition and give themselves another unfair advantage”.

Source: John McDonnell quotes Chairman Mao in Spending Review attack – BBC News

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5 Comments

  1. HuwOS November 26, 2015 at 1:19 am - Reply

    Unfair advantage is core principle of Tories

    • Roy Beiley November 26, 2015 at 9:40 am - Reply

      I didn’t think that they had any principles. How wrong can you be?

  2. daijohn November 26, 2015 at 3:10 am - Reply

    The Tories know that their funding from business (millions) is safe as long they continue with their ‘business’ friendly attitude whilst parties representing working people will lose out. This in addition to attempts in the Trade Union Bill to severely reduce Labour party funding. It’s so obvious why do we let them get away with it?
    If you read Private Eye regularly you will soon become aware of the scale of the bungs(corruption) involved in the funding of the conservative party.

  3. simplyshirah November 26, 2015 at 11:18 am - Reply

    Oh how lovely of the Tories. Whilst they, of course, collect more money from their mega rich, tax evading crony paymasters!!! That’d be right.

  4. Tim November 26, 2015 at 11:28 am - Reply

    Pretty dodgy stuff ; funding expenditure based on predicted income. This whole sleight of hand may well end going up in smoke. More worryingly: With benefits frozen for four plus years and rents unerringly rising year on year, how the heck can billions of pounds be cut from Housing Benefit without tens of thousands of tenants ending up in Queer Street?

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