MacTel gives over $200k to the ALP

 

Political donor disclosure.

Macquarie Telecom has tripled the amount of money it paid to political parties in the 2009/10 financial year, shelling out over $263,000 - mostly to the Labor Party.

The telco and data centre operator gave $198,800 to Federal Labor and another $7,000 to state Labor in NSW and Tasmania in 2009-10 [pdf].

By contrast, it gave $19,668 to the Federal Liberal Party, $13,750 to the Liberal-National Party in Queensland and several thousands more to various state iterations of the Liberals or Nationals. It also gave $5,000 to the Greens in Tasmania.

ALP representatives have attended or provided supporting statements to several of the company's initiatives in the months since.

In July 2010, NSW ALP treasurer Eric Roozendaal opened the company's new call centre in Sydney, and in December 2010 it sponsored an Access Economics study that promoted the business benefits of the Federal ALP Government's National Broadband Network plan.

iTnews.com.au makes no suggestion of any impropriety relating to any donors and the political parties involved.

Macquarie Telecom also topped donations among IT companies in the prior financial year (2008-09), when it gave away $86,200, again the lion's share to the ALP.

However, unlike 2008-9, technology companies for the most part did not feature among political donors exposed by the Australian Electoral Commission today in its annual publishing of donor reports.

Other companies that had IT interests were again present in the donor lists.

One of the contracted builders of stage one backhaul for NBN Tasmania – John Holland – gave $5,000 to state Labor in Tasmania, as well as $7,000 and $1,000 to the Queensland and NSW Labor branches respectively.

John Holland's parent, Leighton Holdings – which owns another company associated with backhaul rollouts for the Government, Nextgen Networks – gave a shade under $100,000 in total to various state and federal Labor entities and about $83,000 to various Liberal Party entities.

Springfield Land Corporation - which had a large hand in building the Polaris data centre - gave $65,210 to Queensland Labor and just over $10,000 to Queensland's Liberal Party.

Professional services consultancies like Ernst & Young, PricewaterhouseCoopers and Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu were also donors in the past financial year.

Copyright © iTnews.com.au . All rights reserved.


MacTel gives over $200k to the ALP
"Yes but the Tudahope brothers well they like to do things differently."
By GloriaT
 
 
 
Comments: 5
hellfire
Feb 1, 2011 3:02 PM
I for one would like to see all business banned from making political donations as they all want something for their money. I'm not suggesting it is a bribe but money spent to help promote a party which may be inclined to do something in the business's economic interests. Over $200K to a political party would not be just a jesture.
Ace
Feb 1, 2011 6:01 PM
Introduce a tax levy instead?
GloriaT
Feb 1, 2011 7:34 PM
MacTel can give $200K to the political parties but it can't afford to look after it's staff? That $200K would have been much better spent assisting the people it made redundant last year who had faimilies to feed and look after. It really is immoral behaviour of the worst possible kind. If MacTel want PR then they should have spent that $200K on conventional marketing instead of trying to get press by getting the politicians to attend their events. Mabe next year they can spend the $200k more responsibly, perhaps replacing that useless 1990's style website.

In the press for all the wrong reasons again MacTel
realitybites
Feb 2, 2011 7:29 AM
I'd pay to keep politicians AWAY from any sort of PR event.
GloriaT
Feb 3, 2011 9:19 PM
Yes but the Tudahope brothers well they like to do things differently.
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