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Government To Go Ahead With Electoral Bonds Even If Consensus Eludes

Political parties have not come up yet with any suggestion on electoral bonds.



Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) members and supporters carry India national flags during a BJP motorcycle rally in Aligarh, Uttar Pradesh, India. (Photographer: Prashanth Vishwanathan/Bloomberg)
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) members and supporters carry India national flags during a BJP motorcycle rally in Aligarh, Uttar Pradesh, India. (Photographer: Prashanth Vishwanathan/Bloomberg)

The government on Monday said it will go ahead with electoral bonds even if fails to reach a consensus on the issue, as political parties have not come up yet with any suggestion on the proposal.

The system of cash donation has to change and people despite knowing the "truth" are "reluctant" to offer their suggestions on the electoral bonds, Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said in his address at the Income Tax Day event in New Delhi.

Therefore, if suggestions don’t come and consensus eludes us, then the government of the day can’t run away from its responsibility. It will have to announce its decision which will then become the law of the land
Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitely

In a major move aimed at promoting transparency in political funding, Jaitley had in announced capping of anonymous cash donations to political parties at Rs 2,000 and introduced the concept of electoral bonds in his Union Budget speech for 2017-18.

"I think in the changing India today, there is going to be a large section of opinion which is going to support this," he said.

Jaitley has already asked political parties to offer a better suggestion on the proposed electoral bond mechanism, but he had not received any suggestion till last week.

He had said that for last 70 years India's democracy has been funded by invisible money and elected representatives, governments, political parties, Parliament and even the Election Commission have completely failed in checking it and the electoral bonds would help to deal with it.

As per the electoral bond mechanism announced in the Budget, the proposed bonds will resemble a promissory note and not an interest-paying debt instrument. They will be sold by authorised banks and can be deposited in notified accounts of political parties within the duration of their validity.

The bonds will not carry the name of the donor and routing of the money through banks will ensure that only tax paid money comes into the political system.