On Thursday,the commission released a statement acknowledging its investigation “has been underway for some time now”.
In explaining the delay,it said the commission’s compliance officers used legal powers to compel event organisers to hand over information. But the Liberal Party appears to have requested a review of those orders.
“These written notices ordinarily require responses within 14 days,” it said. “However,individuals and entities exercised their lawful right to request reviews of the written notices,which means – even if the notice is affirmed – it may be up to eight weeks before any information is received from the written notice.”
The fundraising event raised about $598,747 – half of which came from donors during the day and half from other donations raised before the event – as part of a marketing promise to match any donations dollar for dollar.
Liberal state director Sam McQuestin last month toldThe Age the “Ditch Dan” event involved the use of a “third party” entity to collect the donations.
He insisted that delays in the cash raised arriving into the Liberal Party’s campaign coffers meant the 21-day disclosure period began on September 16,about three weeks after the actual event.
Liberal Party state director Sam McQuestin.
“We will easily have[the donations] in the system within 21 days of that date,” he said at the time.
A month from polling day,the VEC has also not yet released details of a second investigation. In August,Opposition Leader Matthew Guy was ordered to hand over documents to the commission after his chief of staff,Mitch Catlin,resigned following a report byThe Agethat revealed he sought$100,000 in payments to his private marketing company in addition to his salary in a draft contract that was never signed.
It also comes afterThe Age revealed the Victorian Liberal Party’s in-house lawyer Chandra Lloyd resigned,among other things,over concerns the party had failed to comply with electoral laws,including in relation to the “Ditch Dan” campaign.
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The campaign’s website,ditchdanandrews.com,urged party faithful to stump up to “ensure Matthew Guy and his team have the resources they need to defeat Daniel Andrews and Labor,so Victoria can recover and lead”.
“Victoria can’t afford four more years of Labor’s lockdowns,mismanagement and mounting debt,” the website read. “Election campaigns are expensive. For example,one 30-second TV slot during the nightly news costs around $10,000.”
The website includes details of 2295 donations,many of them made anonymously. While most were relatively small amounts,below the disclosure threshold,more than 20 appeared to exceed the $1080 threshold,some of which do not appear to have been disclosed to the VEC.
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