The almost 600 environmental groups that hold tax-deductibility status in Australia are being scrutinised by a federal government inquiry, with reports that more than 100 of them face being struck off the list.
Some, like the state and territory Conservation Councils and Environmental Defenders Offices, are still reeling from cuts to their programs and core funding. Others, such as Greenpeace, The Wilderness Society, and Friends of the Earth, could lose access to the tax-deductible donations that help sustain their work.
Encouraging donations
Deductible gift-recipient status allows eligible organisations, such as those on the environmental register, to receive tax-deductible gifts and contributions. Consistent with similar schemes in the United States and Europe, the environmental register was established as an incentive for citizens and corporations to fund organisations that are active in the public sphere, while also feeding into the logic of small government and shifting the burden of catering for social needs back onto the community.
In Australia, an environmental organisation is defined as a body or society whose primary purpose is to protect the environment or conduct education and research.
Importantly, however, in 2010 the High Court ruled that groups with tax-deductible status also have the right to engage in political debate and advocacy. The judgement described the freedom to speak out on political issues as โindispensableโ for โrepresentative and responsible governmentโ.
Moreover, the court pointed out that there is no general rule that excludes โpolitical objectsโ from charitable purposes. Instead, the key consideration is whether the organisation โcontributes to the public welfareโ. The ruling has been used as a precedent both in Australia and overseas, such as when Greenpeace won a favourable decision from the New Zealand Supreme Court last year.
Why is Australia holding the inquiry?
The reviewโs chair, Liberal MP Alex Hawke, said the inquiry aims to:
โฆensure that tax deductible donations, which are a generous concession from the taxpayer, are used for the purpose intended and expected by the community.
His colleaguesโ comments have given some more insight into what Hawke means by the adjectives โintendedโ and โexpectedโ.
Nationals Senator Matthew Canavan said he is concerned by the development of environmental groups from โa niche village industryโ into โserious professional organisation[s]โ, while highlighting what he described as a โlarge minorityโ of โ100 or 150โ groups that are โclearly engaged primarilyโ in stopping fossil fuel and industrial development in Australia.
Liberal MP Andrew Nikulic sought to distinguish groups like the Bob Brown Foundation who โcampaign against the governmentโ from โreal charitiesโ like โSt Vinnies and Salvosโ. Ignoring the fact that the latter groups have been vocal critics of government cuts to welfare spending, Nikulic has also made unsubstantiated claims that green groups have been involved in โillegal activitiesโ.
His Liberal National Party colleague George Christensen went even further, labelling certain groups as โterroristsโ and accusing them of treason.
Their views are echoed by Gary Johns, a former Labor MP and now columnist for The Australian newspaper, who has criticised the entire rationale for tax-deductible status on the basis that it contradicts the โvoluntary nature of charityโ.
While conceding that the Hawke review may be interpreted as an โattack on [environmental organisationsโ] efforts to protect the environmentโ, Johns also argued that governments โshould be reticentโ about supporting organisations that โpromote viewpoints on issues where there is reasonable disagreement in the electorateโ.
It is difficult to see what organisations would satisfy such a test. Certainly not the Institute of Public Affairs, the Chifley Research Centre or Menzies House, which also enjoy tax deductibility but seem unlikely to face the same scrutiny advocated by Hawke.
The political context
Clearly, we have strayed some way from Hawkeโs official justification for the inquiry. His vague reference to the undisputed notion that tax-deductible donations should be subject to public scrutiny disguises deeper political and ideological goals.
To properly understand those goals, we must interpret the current inquiry in the appropriate political context. Parts of this have been described by Joan Staples in an earlier Conversation article, and by Mike Seccombe in the Saturday Paper.
In terms of the wider political context of this inquiry, we might also consider:
- last yearโs attempt by Liberal MP Richard Colbeck to ban environmental boycotts;
- incidences of gag clauses being written into the contracts of community legal centres;
- the defunding of voluntary environment, sustainability and heritage organisations and national environmental defendersโ offices; and
- the drafting of anti-protest laws in states such as Western Australia.
Against this backdrop, the inquiry can be seen as part of a trend towards quieting the environment movement. Even if it does not result in substantive changes to the law, the inquiry is forcing poorly funded groups to spend time and resources on making submissions to justify their status.
Another difficulty is the committeeโs desire to frame the โpublic welfareโ requirement in terms of ill-defined community โexpectationsโ. These can be difficult to discern and for this reason we ought to strive for the broadest possible political debate, rather than attempting to narrow it. If that means that taxpayers subsidise perspectives with which they donโt necessarily agree, it is a small price to pay for a robust public sphere.
Finally, given the urgency of the environmental crisis, an increasing number of Australians recognise that we need environmental groups who do more than plant trees.
In the run to this yearโs Paris climate talks and next yearโs federal election, we need laws that encourage full-blooded political participation.
This article was originally published on The Conversation.
Read the original article.
