Political Parties Declare €160,000 in Donations

Political parties in Ireland received donations of €159,819 last year.

In its annual report, the Standards in Public Office Commission said there were 19 political parties registered during 2018 to contest Dáil or European elections.

Each of the parties were required to complete a donation statement to the Commission by the end of March this year, disclosing donations exceeding €1,500 in value received during 2018.

As of the March 31 deadline, 15 political parties had complied fully with the statutory requirements. The remaining four statements were received by April 15.

The maximum value of donations which a political party may accept from the same donor in the same year is €2,500.

According to the figures, Fine Gael received the highest in donations at 81,899 euro.

Sinn Féin followed with €48,470, the Labour Party received €22,150, Workers and Unemployed Action accepted €4,800 and Fianna Fáil gained €2,500.

Fine Gael’s Josepha Madigan received the largest donation in her party of €2,296, ahead of Leo Varadkar’s €1,992.

A number of Labour Party TDs received €2,400 in donations, while Sinn Féin’s Denise Mitchell and Senator Paul Gavan received the highest donations with €2,665 each.

Workers and Unemployed Action councilor Pat English and TD Seamus Healy both received €2,400 in donations.

In accordance with the legislation, details of Certificates of Monetary Donations and bank statements furnished to the Commission by political parties and their accounting units are not laid before the Houses of the Oireachtas or put on public display.

The aggregate closing balance held by accounting units in relation to 2018 was €1,150,073.