Josiah Mortimer writes:
Last week saw the release of all registered
parties’ finances for 2012, as well as Q1
figures for 2013.
It was gold dust for politics geeks. Surprisingly
(or perhaps not), the media chose to ignore pretty much all of the data,
probably due to all the much more newsworthy story of a couple having a baby.
The press did pick up on Labour’s finances,
noting it received the most donations out of any party after raking in over £33m.
Yet this fails to note that the total was in reality a fair bit higher than
that due to the existence of the Co-operative Party, which only runs candidates
jointly with Labour – effectively adding over £1m to Labour’s spending. So £34m
spent, with not much of a boost for Miliband.
There are some much more interesting findings
altogether ignored. Here’s the top ten:
1) The BNP remains heavily in debt
(despite claims by Nick Griffin that it’s on the mend), with
over £356,000 in liabilities. While a slight improvement on its previous
£541k of debt, in relation to its income (nearly £650k) it still equates to the
party being 55% in the red.
2) UKIP’s rise isn’t really reflected in its
2012 finances after bringing in £1.23m, only slightly up on its £1.07m in
2011. And it spent just over a million pounds, little up on its £971k the year
before. So its surge in membership and support doesn’t seem to have translated
immediately into hard cash. On the other hand, it looks like it’s building up a
substantial-ish fighting fund for the 2015 election (see
here). Thus far it’s amassed over £323k, tripling its 2011 assets of £104k.
Keep your eye out for a continuing trend in 2014 in the run-up to the election.
3) The SNP’s income plummeted last year
from over £5m in 2011 to just over £2.3m. That doesn’t bode well for its
independence hopes. It’s also reflected in its expenditure, which went from
£3.45m in 2011 to £2.66m last year. It does have half a million quid in
reserves, meaning the SNP could be gearing up for a big referendum campaign
spending spree in 2014. Or it could reflect its activists and independence
supporters tunnelling funds directly into the Yes to Independence campaign. Check
out the dramatic graph anyway.
4) A mixed picture for the Welsh nationalists,
with Plaid Cymru racking up £683k in income and spending £594k of it – yet with
similar assets to that of UKIP of £318k. Why does a Welsh-only party have the
same amount in the kitty as a UK-wide party polling double that of the Liberal
Democrats?
5) The Green Party of England and Wales is on
the up, remaining one of the only parties to spend less than it brings in.
Basically, the Greens know how to ‘balance the books’. Scoring some steady
gains in local government, the party ran a pretty tight ship on an income of
£781k (not much more than the collapsing BNP’s £650k), and spent £745k. Not bad
work.
6) Things aren’t great for the Liberal
Democrats. They’ve gone from holding nearly £2m of assets in 2006 to being
£1.15m in the red today. At the same time, their income has gone from £10m in
2010 (at the peak of Cleggmania) to £6.4m today, a collapse of more than a
third. The phrase ‘terminal decline’ comes to mind.
7) Labour are actually much less in debt than
the Conservatives. Says a lot about Osborne’s economic policies both for
the country and his own party…
8) The Communist Party of Britain seems to be
doing reasonably (especially given it sort of disbanded at the start of the
1990s), with an income of £123k while spending over £129k in 2012 – leading
some to ask how it was planning to make up the shortfall: Keynesian stimulus or
ruthless austerity? Either way it’s unclear what they spend it on given they
rarely stand candidates. Either way we won’t know who funds them since they
stopped registering large donations in mid-2009 (check it yourself here).
9) The ~200 member strong Socialist Party of
Great Britain, not to be confused with the much larger Socialist Party of
England and Wales (hold off the People’s Front of Judea jokes…), raked in a
£295,775 donation early this year from a certain Mr. Stanley Robert Parker.
He’s a published sociologist (cited on Wikipedia, no
less). In fact, his donation is the 7th largest party donation of the whole
first quarter of 2013. The same chap also gave them £150k at the end of 2012.
10) Company donations made up
over
40% of UKIP’s income in the first part of the year, a higher proportion
than any other party (the Lib Dems ranking second at nearly 25%, with the
Tories on less than a fifth).
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