Jaitley was all for financing of political parties through 'Electoral Bonds', which he proposed in his budget speech. The bonds will open for sale a little before every election and donors can buy the bearer bonds from scheduled banks and donate to parties of their choice.
"It (state funding of elections) is a possible suggestion. But I will add only two caveats. It should not be read that I am critical of it.
Also, in this model, where the government gives funds to political parties or candidates for contesting elections, there is "no guarantee" that only the money received from the state will be utilised and no outside funds will be spent, he argued.
"The argument is you can't spend within that limit and obviously you take some from the state and then you go hunting elsewhere," he said. "It (state funding of elections) is a slogan. I am not too sure if it's going to a be a popular one once it is rolled out."
"I'm not saying I will rule out the state funding idea completely... Let's have it for discussion on the table... Let us discuss because even the present model is a experimental model because if it has taken us 70 years to reach a solution, you have to discuss all the models," he said.
The state funding model, he said, is dependent on whether candidates spend within the prescribed norm. "There is an uneasy feeling that it's not true," he said.
Also, a political party's expenditure, which includes that on staff, vehicles, planes and advertisements, will be outside the scope of what the government will fund.
The Finance Minister said state funding is being mentioned as an attractive model but the government can only fund what the candidate has to spend officially.
"Beyond that... There is a huge world of expenditure outside that. I don't think the Indrajit Gupta Committee (on state funding of elections) envisaged the system getting so costlier," Jaitley added.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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