Spending by parties and candidates in the three-week general election campaign in the spring will comfortably exceed €10 million, sources from all the major parties have confirmed.
Parties are working on the basis their campaign “war chests” will be greater than 2011 when spending topped €9.2 million during the three-week campaign.
It is likely the amount spent could return to the levels of the last pre-recession general election, 2007, where spending exceeded €11 million, although at least one party said privately it might have to borrow funds to do so.
The traditional big two parties, Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil, have each raised in the region of €1 million in voluntary funding every year since the general election of 2011.
The Labour Party raised €242,000 privately in 2013, mostly from membership fees. It was a fall on the €409,000 raised from non-State sources in 2012.
Most of the difference was attributed to a sharp fall in trade union afilliation fees.
Sinn Féin, too, has raised between about €220,000 and €245,000 each year from what it describes as “other income”.
“We are in good shape and look like we will be in around where we were in 2011 [on spending],” a senior Fine Gael strategist said.
A Labour counterpart said: “We will have no big problems on the money side when it comes to the election.”
A Fianna Fáil source said most of the funding it raised voluntarily was ringfenced for election spending and the party was in “good shape”.
These funds are in addition to State funding for each party: Fine Gael, for example, receives almost €5 million in funding from the Exchequer for its party and parliamentary activities annually.
However, parties are not allowed to spend this funding for electoral purposes.
Spending limits
There are disclosure rules and limits on electoral spending but they only apply from the time the Dáil is dissolved until polling takes place, about three weeks.
Parties are free to spend what they want before that period.
Before the 2011 election, it was estimated that parties spent up to €4 million on “early election spending”.
For example, in this cycle, Sinn Féin has erected election posters on billboards featuring its three leading TDs while Labour has launched two video campaigns on social media under the banner of labour.ie/better.
For the first time, in this coming election, a significant portion of campaign spending by parties will be migrating online away from traditional sources such as TV and print advertising.
Fine Gael raised €1.1 million voluntarily, its 2014 accounts show. Of that, €679,000 was raised in its national draw, with its parliamentarians contributing a further €112,000.
Fianna Fáil raised €960,000 last year, with €413,000 from the draw, €318,000 from membership and €169,000 from the national collection.
In 2011, Fine Gael was the biggest spender during the three-week window, with an outlay of €3.1 million.
Fianna Fáil and Labour spent about €2 million each while Sinn Féin spent €500,000.
The latter’s budget is expected to increase substantially this time around as it hopes to increase its seat number substantially.