BRS tops income, TMC expenditure chart among regional parties in fiscal 22-23: ADR report

ADR disclosed detailed income and expenditure reports for 39 out of 57 regional parties for the fiscal year 2022-23.

Published Jul 19, 2024 | 7:06 PMUpdated Jul 19, 2024 | 7:06 PM

The authorised SBI branch in Hyderabad in poll-bound Telangana led the sales with ₹377 crore.

The BRS topped the income chart among regional parties for the financial year 2022-23 with ₹737.67 crore, 42.38 percent of the total, according to poll rights body ADR.

The top five parties with the highest expenditure are All India Trinamool Congress (TMC) which spent ₹181.18 crore or 37.66 percent, followed by YSRCP which spent ₹79.32 crore or 16.49 percent, BRS, which spent ₹57.47 crore or 11.94 percent, DMK, which spent ₹52.62 crore or 10.94 percent, and the Samajwadi Party, which spent ₹31.41 crore or 6.53 percent of the total expenditure, ADR said.

In a revealing analysis of the financial health of India’s regional political parties, the Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR) has disclosed detailed income and expenditure reports for 39 out of 57 regional parties for the fiscal year 2022-23.

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The income of parties

After BRS, the TMS had the highest income of ₹333.45 crore or 19.16 percent, while the DMK reported an income of ₹214.35 crore or 12.32 percent of the total income of the 39 regional parties analysed in the ADR report.

Collectively, the top five parties accounted for ₹1,541.32 crore, or 88.56 percent of the total income of the parties analysed while the total declared income of the 39 regional parties stood at ₹1,740.48 crore, according to the analysis.

The ECI had set 31 October, 2023, as the deadline for submission of annual audited accounts of political parties, however, only 16 of them adhered to the time limit.

Twenty-three parties submitted their reports late, with delays ranging from three to 150 days.

The audit reports for 18 regional parties, including prominent ones like Shiv Sena (SHS), Bodoland People’s Front (BPF), Jammu & Kashmir National Conference, Nationalist Congress Party, and Shiv Sena (UBT), were not available on the ECI website at the time of the report’s preparation, the ADR said.

A total of 19 regional parties declared unspent income for the fiscal year.

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Unspent income

BRS had the highest unspent income of ₹680.20 crore, followed by Biju Janata Dal with ₹171.06 crore and DMK with ₹161.72 crore.

Conversely, 20 parties reported expenditures exceeding their income, with Janta Dal (Secular) spending 490.43 percent more than its income.

Voluntary contributions, including donations and electoral bonds, were the primary sources of income for the parties, amounting to ₹1,522.46 crore or 87.47 percent of the total income.

Of this, ₹1,285.83 crore came from electoral bonds. Only eight regional parties declared receiving donations through electoral bonds.

ADR’s report recommended that the ECI enforce stricter deadlines and penalise parties for late or non-submission of audit reports.

A full disclosure of donor details under the Right to Information Act is also urged to ensure transparency in political funding.

The report calls for rigorous enforcement of laws like Section 13A of the Income Tax Act and Section 29 (C) of the Representation of People Act, which mandate financial disclosure by political parties.

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