Polly Toynbee unreasonably criticises the Electoral Commission investigation into donations to the Conservative party from Bearwood Corporate Services (Unlike Ashcroft, the horror of Tory cuts will stay hidden, 2 March). Our inquiries began 18 months not two years ago and a full summary of the outcome of the investigation is on our website. It was, inevitably, a lengthy investigation due to the volume of evidence, legal issues and financial analysis involved. We always aim to complete investigations as quickly as possible, but our priority is to conduct a fair and thorough investigation within the legal framework parliament has set, and the powers available to us.

Since the commission was established voters have been given unprecedented information about how political parties are funded. We have published details of over 25,000 donations, amounting to more than £380m. Where parties accepted donations they shouldn’t have, we’ve made sure they are surrendered. And we review and publish parties’ statements of accounts, and records of campaign spending, to ensure they follow the rules.

We have long pressed for powers to require the disclosure of information relevant to our investigations. We hope to receive these after the election, in time for the 1 July start date proposed by the current government with cross-party support. These will certainly help us to do our job. But to compare any aspect of this regime to that administered by the Commons fees office in relation to MPs’ expenses, as Toynbee does, is absurd.

Jenny Watson

Chair, Electoral Commission

• Simon Jenkins (The root of the Tories’ dire Ashcroft gaffe is our medieval party funding, 5 March) is to be congratulated on reminding us of the wise words of Michael Pinto-Duschinsky, a leading academic on the funding of political parties: “By making them even more dependent upon state funding, they automatically become less democratic.”

Labour debated this issue at its 2006 conference and rejected more state funding. In a submission to Labour’s consultation, I and others proposed that its response to party funding should be founded on: membership, transparency, collective action and spending (not donation) limits. Those principles reflected the findings of the Electoral Commission’s inquiry into the funding of parties published in 2004, which also rejected more state funding. Its report was ignored by all three main parties in the Commons, and hence never debated.

It is good to see that the role of membership and small donations is finally being recognised by Labour party head office, with the “Give to Win” appeal. This is now being promoted on a decentralised constituency basis by Progress to help Labour candidates counter the impact of Ashcroft’s millions in marginal seats.

Peter Kenyon

Chair, Save the Labour Party

• Your suggestion (Editorial, 2 March) that all parties share responsibility for the distortion of our democracy by offshore paymasters is misleading. During the passage of the 2009 political parties and elections bill the Liberal Democrats tabled and supported amendments to cap donations, limit constituency spending and end the purchase of seats in parliament by foreign millionaires. In the Lords, we even succeeded in securing restrictions on “non-doms”. Yet Jack Straw failed to implement the change parliament passed, while the Conservatives voted against every reform we proposed. As a result, the outcome of the 2010 general election could easily be the most infected by big money since rotten boroughs were abolished in 1832. So much for the Brown/Cameron promises of cleaner politics.

Paul Tyler

Liberal Democrat constitutional affairs spokesman, House of Lords

• Norman Tebbit is wrong (Principle and uncertainty, 2 March). So-called “hung” parliaments are not the problem. They are a better reflection of the popular will than the artificial landslide majorities our antiquated voting system often produces. The problem is the prime minister’s power to call a second election whenever he or she decides. We need fixed-term parliaments so that, whatever verdict the voters give, the politicians must make it work for the full term.

Professor Ron Glatter

Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire


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