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The Conservatives’ co-chair, Amanda Milling
The Conservatives’ co-chair, Amanda Milling, said the elections body should accept more scrutiny or be disbanded. Photograph: Peter Summers/Getty
The Conservatives’ co-chair, Amanda Milling, said the elections body should accept more scrutiny or be disbanded. Photograph: Peter Summers/Getty

Tory plan to scrap election watchdog 'undermines democracy'

This article is more than 3 years old

Labour and Lib Dems says threat to Electoral Commission is bid to stop exposure on Russian funding connections

Opposition parties have condemned Conservative proposals to abolish or significantly revamp the Electoral Commission, with Labour saying any move to restrict the elections watchdog risks undermining faith in democracy.

The Liberal Democrats said any moves against the Electoral Commission, as outlined by the Conservatives’ co-chair Amanda Milling, appeared an attempt to prevent the exposure of “embarrassing funding connections to Russian oligarchs”.

The commission regulates political donations, spending and other areas, and has the power to undertake its own investigations, and fine parties and officials for breaches of the rules, although more serious matters are passed to police.

The government’s advisory body the Committee on Standards in Public Life is currently holding a review of electoral regulation. In a submission to the process, the Conservatives said the commission should not be given new powers of prosecution, saying this would bring “too many conflicts of interest”.

Writing in the Telegraph, Milling argued that the body should accept more outside scrutiny or be disbanded: “If the Electoral Commission fails to make these changes and do the job it was set up to do then the only option would be to abolish it.”

The commission is viewed with suspicion by some Conservative MPs who believe it has unfairly targeted pro-Brexit groups, such as with its decision to fine the campaigner Darren Grimes £20,000 for electoral spending offences in the 2016 referendum. This was overturned by a court appeal.

Some campaign groups have called instead for increased scrutiny of the election system, particularly after a long-delayed report by parliament’s intelligence and security committee said the government and intelligence agencies had failed to properly assess Russian attempts to interfere with the Brexit vote.

Cat Smith, Labour’s shadow Cabinet Office minister, who deals with voting issues, called the Conservative proposal “a harmful and worrying step for the integrity of our democracy”.

“Removing the Electoral Commission is just one part of a concerted strategy by the Tories to remove scrutiny and proper accountability,” she said. “Without the Electoral Commission, no one could prevent the Tories from introducing policies that fundamentally make it harder for people to vote, such as mandatory Voter ID.

“This move comes straight out of the Republican party playbook.”

The Lib Dem MP Wendy Chamberlain said that with attacks on judges and the illegal prorogation of parliament, Boris Johnson had shown he was “a threat to the rule of law”.

She said: “Now, with the Tories’ embarrassing funding connections to Russian oligarchs exposed, their plan to turn their guns on the Electoral Commission is a direct attempt to undermine our democracy.”

In its own response to the review of electoral regulations, the Electoral Reform Society has called instead for increased powers for the commission, on the lines of the Information Commissioner’s Office.

The group argued: “It is striking that we now have a regulator with substantial powers to protect data privacy, but no such powers have been granted to the regulator entrusted with protecting our democracy.”

A Conservative spokesman said that if the commission were abolished, its functions should be transferred to other bodies, such as police and Companies House.

He said: “Our submission makes clear that the Electoral Commission needs to reform to become more accountable, with clearer, up-to-date, non-conflicting guidance for political parties, particularly in light of past mistakes.

“Would the Liberal Democrats or Labour say every fine or investigation into them has been proportionate and fair? Rather than lobbying for more powers, the commission should be focusing on getting its house in order.”

More on this story

More on this story

  • Boundary changes may reduce access to MPs in UK’s poorest areas, research finds

  • Britons living overseas for over 15 years likely to win voting right before next election

  • More forms of ID may be allowed for UK voters after damning report

  • Hundreds of thousands face exclusion over voter ID laws, UK watchdog says

  • Voter ID in England led to racial and disability discrimination, report finds

  • What are Labour’s plans for giving foreign nationals the right to vote?

  • Electoral Commission failed cybersecurity test in same year as hack

  • Hacked UK voter data could be used to target disinformation, warn experts

  • Electoral Commission and PSNI data breaches: what we know so far

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