Chapter 7 - Enforcement of guidelines and other accountability mechanisms
Sufficiency of guidelines
7.1
The Committee acknowledges that general guidelines on
government advertising have, on their own, limited power to direct the
activities of the government. As Mr Harry
Evans, the Clerk of the Senate, noted in his
submission:
[The guidelines] amount to little more than an injunction that
government advertising projects must not be party-political ... Their application
would involve a great deal of subjective judgement. Because of this subjective
element, governments could run partisan campaigns while claiming adherence to
the guidelines, by pointing out that any claim that advertisements are partisan
is merely a matter of personal opinion.[256]
7.2
This means that, even if the government were to adopt
the JCPAA guidelines or some version of them, the 'problem' of government
advertising being used or having the potential to be used for partisan
political purpose will not be automatically solved. Guidelines will only be
effective in the context of a broader accountability framework.
7.3
In this chapter, the Committee considers the question
of the enforceability of the guidelines, as well as other mechanisms which
could be part of an overall accountability framework.
Enforceability of guidelines
7.4
This inquiry received little new evidence on the
question of how any guidelines covering the legitimate use of government
advertising might be enforced. There was, however, extensive discussion of this
issue in the inquiry into the 'political honesty' bills by the Senate Finance
and Public Administration Legislation Committee (F&PA Committee) in 2002.
In this section, the Committee reviews the major elements of that discussion.
7.5
There seem to be three main options available for
monitoring and enforcing guidelines on government advertising, which could be
implemented either singly or in some combination. They are: first, enforcement
of the guidelines through the court system; second, establishing some form of
independent scrutiny of proposed advertising campaigns; and, third, enabling
more effective parliamentary scrutiny and accountability.
Court enforcement
7.6
An example of a proposal to monitor and enforce
guidelines on government advertising directly through the court system was
provided by the Government Advertising (Objectivity, Fairness and
Accountability) Bill 2000, introduced by the Hon. Kim
Beazley MP.
7.7
The Financial
Management and Accountability Act 1997 contains a criminal offence, with a
maximum penalty of seven years' imprisonment, that applies where a minister or
official misapplies or improperly uses or disposes of public money.[257] The Bill
sought to amend the Act to state that it is improper to use or permit the use
of public money for a 'government information program' that does not comply
with the principles and guidelines set out in the schedule to the Bill.
That means that it is for the courts to decide whether or not there has been a
breach of the guidelines.[258]
7.8
Again, under this kind of proposal, the guidelines
would be legislated and their interpretation taken outside the Parliamentary
arena. However, in this case, monitoring of the legitimacy of particular
campaigns would always take place after the campaigns had run, rather than in
the context of seeking prior approval.
7.9
The arguments raised against this proposal were:
-
that to create a criminal offence punishable by
up to seven years' imprisonment by reference to such vague guidelines would
result either in a high likelihood of any prosecutions failing or a temptation
to judicial activism;
-
that it is 'inimical to the traditions of the
Australian criminal law system' to invoke the criminal law to deal with a
situation that is essentially political; and
-
that courts are ill-equipped to make the kinds
of determinations that would be required.[259]
7.10
The Committee agrees with the views on this proposal
expressed in the additional comments and points of dissent by Senator the Hon.
John Faulkner
and Senator Michael Forshaw
to the F&PA Legislation Committee report. The Senators recognised 'the
serious difficulties ... of creating a criminal offence by reference to
guidelines which necessarily lack precision and involve a large element of
subjective assessment'.
Independent scrutiny
7.11
The Committee is aware of three different proposals for
ensuring independent scrutiny of proposed government advertising campaigns. In
this section, it outlines those proposals and then develops its own view in
response.
Government Publicity Committee
7.12
The Charter of Political Honesty Bill 2000 [2002]
introduced by Senator Murray proposed the establishment of an independent body,
to be called the Government Publicity Committee, to monitor and enforce
compliance with guidelines for government advertising campaigns.
7.13
The bill proposed that the members of the Government
Publicity Committee be the Auditor-General, the Ombudsman and 'a person with
knowledge and experience in advertising' to be appointed by the
Auditor-General.[260] According to the
bill, if the Committee considered that an advertising campaign did not comply
with the guidelines, it could direct that the campaign be withdrawn or
modified. The Committee would also be given the power to determine whether the
objective of a campaign was legitimate, and whether a campaign was likely to
achieve its stated objective. If not, the committee could order that the
campaign be withdrawn.[261]
7.14
Senator Murray's
proposal required that the guidelines become statutory or legislated
guidelines, and that the independent body have recourse to the courts if a
Commonwealth agency or employee failed to comply with its directions.
7.15
An objective of the bill, elaborated upon by Senator
Murray, was to provide a mechanism whereby an advertisement that breached the
guidelines could be withdrawn or modified at the time, rather than having to be
adjudicated upon after the event when, perhaps, the 'damage' had already been done.[262]
7.16
There were, however, significant arguments raised
against this proposal, including:
-
concern about the subjectivity of the judgements
required to be made by the independent body, especially given the lack of
precision in the guidelines;
-
the danger of politicising the role of offices
such as the Auditor-General and the Ombudsman if they were able to direct that
a campaign be withdrawn; and
-
the lack of provision for the review of the decisions
and directions made by the body, and the fact that courts could be drawn into
essentially political debates.[263]
7.17
The Committee recognises these concerns.[264] Senator Murray
has accepted these are valid concerns, but continues to argue for an
independent oversight body.
Independent commission for advertising
7.18
Other proposals concerning the establishment of some
kind of independent body, but not requiring the involvement of the
Auditor-General or the Ombudsman, have also been made. For example, in evidence
on the Charter of Political Honesty Bill 2000 [2002], Mr
Evans, Clerk of the Senate, said that he
'saw merit' in the establishment of a separate independent body, such as a
government advertising tribunal, that would adjudicate on precise guidelines.[265]
7.19
Likewise, in his submission to this inquiry, Professor
Charles Sampford,
Foundation Professor of Law, and Director, Key Centre for Ethics, Law, Justice
and Governance, Griffith University,
argued that:
...it is time to recognize that we need an institutional solution
that puts approval of government advertising in the hands of an independent
body ... I recall the debates about gerrymanders that raged for most of the first
century of federation. Each side had its own arguments about why what they did
was OK and the other side was terrible. We have now largely taken
redistributions out of the hands of politicians and put them in the hands of
independent electoral commissions. It is one of those developments of our
integrity system that are now completely accepted and which we trumpet to the
world and occasionally provide useful and important assistance to fledgling
democracies. I would like to suggest that the time is overripe for another
development of our integrity system of which we can be retrospectively proud.[266]
7.20
In evidence given at a public hearing, Professor
Sampford elaborated on the mechanism that
might be used to appoint the members of such an independent commission for
advertising. He suggested that the independent commission be appointed by a
parliamentary committee, and that each appointment require multi-party support.[267]
7.21
As with Senator Murray's
original proposal, Professor Sampford
saw that an advantage of this kind of solution is that it would allow a system
of prior approval of government advertising campaigns to be established.[268] In his words:
You want to have somebody making that primary decision, and that
comes back to my big point: prior advice is better than subsequent
investigation ... If you rely on subsequent investigation and exposure, it
actually raises the stakes, and it also does not raise standards of behaviour
as much as if you actually have the prior advice, especially if you have the
capacity to actually get this a rubber stamp saying, 'This is done with
integrity; this is within the guidelines', particular when it comes to say a
government advertising campaign prior to an election campaign.[269]
7.22
Professor Sampford
was questioned about whether, in reality, governments would be prepared to give
up their capacity to run advertising campaigns without having to seek prior
approval or being constrained by an independent arbiter. In response, he
reiterated his earlier example of Australian governments giving up their
capacity to determine electoral distributions. Professor
Sampford suggested that there are two
primary incentives for governments to relinquish the power they have in this
area.
7.23
First, it is in governments' own interests to have fair
rules because governments will be in and out of office. Once out of office,
they may find the benefits of incumbency being used against them. He noted that
'obviously that interest fluctuates depending on whether you are in government
or not'.[270]
7.24
Second, he said that the credibility of the
institutions over which governments are fighting is an issue. 'If the
credibility of winning government is tainted by an allegation of a gerrymander
... the office is not worth as much because the winners have been tainted'.
Similarly, he suggested, democracy involves at heart the understanding that 'if
only the public had a fair description of your views, compared to the other
side's views, they would join you'. If you undermine people's capacity to gain
a fair understanding of your views, or the other side's views, then you
undermine a very important democratic principle.[271]
7.25
Professor Sampford
also suggested that there might be direct advantages in government advertising
campaigns having the imprimatur of an independent body. He said:
As far as straight-out efficiency is concerned, if any
government wants to communicate information to the public, the fact that it has
gone through this independent scrutiny will make it much more credible, people
are much more likely to believe it and you will not have to spend as much money
on it ...[272]
Scrutiny by Public Service Commissioner
7.26
Finally, the Committee notes the proposal for
independent scrutiny of government advertising made by Mr Kelvin Thomson MP in
a Private Member's bill, that was read for the first time on 12 September 2005. The bill includes
a modified version of the JCPAA guidelines and provides that 'a Minister, a
Commonwealth agency or an official must not take any action that is contrary to
the Guidelines'.[273]
7.27
The bill then provides that for each advertising
project proposed by a Commonwealth agency which is estimated to cost $250,000
or more, the Chief Executive of the agency must make a statement to the Public
Service Commissioner. The statement must include information about the purpose
and target audience of the advertising, information about the tendering and
contracting arrangements, the estimated cost of the project, the compliance of
the project with the guidelines and the extent of, and reasons for, any
non-compliance.[274]
7.28
The Commissioner must assess the proposed advertising
project, and recommend that the project be approved or not.[275] The Commissioner's assessment must
be tabled in Parliament and provided to the responsible Minister.[276] The responsible Minister 'must take
into account any recommendations that the Commissioner makes'.[277] The Minister cannot approve a
proposed advertising campaign until the Commissioner has reported, except where
the project addresses major issues of public health, public safety or public
order that have arisen at short notice.[278]
Committee proposal – report by Auditor-General
7.29
The Committee notes that the merits of all these proposed
'institutional solutions' to the issue of government advertising are that they
attempt to address the potential impact of government advertising campaigns in
propaganda as well as fiscal terms.
7.30
The very fact, however, that they attempt to address
this issue means that any body charged with approving or withholding approval
of proposed advertising campaigns may be vulnerable to being caught in
political cross-fire.
7.31
The Committee seeks to draw on the strengths of a
number of the proposals outlined in this section, while being realistic about
the fact that ultimately the development and approval of advertising campaigns
is in the hands of the government of the day. The Committee also does not wish
an independent scrutineer to duplicate monitoring that is taking place by other
means.
7.32
Accordingly, the Committee makes the following proposal
for ensuring some degree of independent scrutiny of government advertising
activities:
-
Once an advertising campaign valued at $250,000
or more has been finalised and has been given final approval by the MCGC, the
advertisements must be submitted to the Auditor-General or their delegate for
assessment. The advertisements are to be submitted to the Auditor-General by
the department that is incurring the expenditure. The Auditor-General must
report back to the department and the portfolio minister whether the campaign
complies with the revised guidelines on government advertising, and the extent
of any non-compliance.
-
It is open to the department and the Minister to
make the changes necessary to bring the campaign into compliance, or to reject
the Auditor-General's report.
-
Every six months, the Auditor-General must table
a report in the Parliament which details his or her assessment against the
guidelines of the advertising campaigns that have been implemented during that
six-month period.
-
If a department continues with a campaign that
the Auditor-General has assessed as not complying with the guidelines, and has
provided reasons for that course of action, the Auditor-General must include
the departmental response in the tabled report. If a department has amended a
campaign in the light of the Auditor-General's initial assessment, the
Auditor-General will not table the initial report but only the final assessment
made of the campaign.
7.33
The Committee notes that the former NSW
Auditor-General, Mr Tony
Harris, endorsed the notion that it was
appropriate for the Commonwealth Auditor-General to audit government
advertising campaigns for their legality and their efficacy.[279]
7.34
It may be argued that this proposal still risks
politicising the office of the Auditor-General. The Committee does not believe
this will occur for the following reasons.
7.35
First, the Auditor-General routinely makes critical
findings relating to government departments, programs and policy
implementation. Indeed, the role of the Auditor-General is to improve the
integrity of public administration by examining where the government is not
meeting its own guidelines or stated objectives. The extent to which the
government is being successful in this regard is always a matter of judgement
and analysis, rather than of mechanical checking against a set of undisputed
'facts'.
7.36
This proposal requires simply that the Auditor-General
evaluate the extent to which the government is complying with the guidelines on
government advertising that the Committee has recommended the government adopt.
It is therefore not different in kind to the evaluations and performance audits
that the Auditor-General routinely conducts on other activities of government.
7.37
As Mr Harris said:
ANAO has a duty to perform audits that are relevant to improving
the legality and efficiency, economy and effectiveness of government. ANAO may
not validly question the merits of government policies, but it may – and must –
examine their legality and their efficacy. Indeed, if ANAO avoided audits
solely because they are controversial, it would be failing its duty.[280]
7.38
Second, this proposal does not require that government advertising campaigns are
approved by the Auditor-General before they can be run, nor that the
Auditor-General may direct the withdrawal of an advertising campaign. Rather,
government advertising campaigns are simply certified as complying with the
guidelines or not, and a report on the extent of any non-compliance made
available to the Parliament and the public.
7.39
The consequences of any non-compliant government
advertising being implemented remain a matter for the Parliament to pursue.
Effective parliamentary scrutiny
7.40
The third option that is available for monitoring
government compliance with any guidelines on government advertising is the
establishment of conditions for more effective parliamentary scrutiny.
7.41
The F&PA Legislation Committee report discussed
this option in terms of a suggestion from the Ombudsman that a parliamentary
committee be established for the purpose. Parliament, it was proposed, could
set the standards to be considered and the committee might recommend action
'related to a Minister' or reimbursement to the relevant agency of money spent
on politically partisan advertisements.[281]
7.42
This option would not require that the guidelines or
standards be legislated, and would put the issue of making judgements about
political matters back in the sphere of politics.
7.43
A concern expressed about this proposal was that any
parliamentary body which had 'right of veto' over an executive government
advertising program would find its role difficult.[282]
7.44
However, an advantage of this proposal is that it would
allow parliament to scrutinise proposed advertising campaigns in advance of
their being broadcast, and to directly monitor large-scale expenditure of
public funds. The scrutiny proposed is analogous to that undertaken by the
Joint Standing Committee on Public Works, which considers expenditure of $6
million or more on all public works sponsored by Commonwealth departments and
major statutory authorities with large building programs.
7.45
Another approach to ensuring more effective
parliamentary scrutiny of advertising activities would be to require that the
Parliament have access to all information relevant to the government's decision
making about the need for and the appropriation of funds for government
advertising campaigns. Provided with this information, the Parliament would
then be in a position better to hold the relevant Minister to account for the
expenditure of funds in his or her portfolio.
7.46
The Committee notes that this approach falls into the
'subsequent investigation' rather than 'prior advice' category, but considers
that it is a necessary element of any effective accountability framework in
this area. The question of what information might be required by the Parliament
to exercise this role will be considered in part in the next section of the
report.
Other accountability mechanisms
7.47
In evidence to the Committee, two other accountability
mechanisms were suggested which have not previously been discussed in the
report. They were, first, caps on expenditure and, second, further disclosure
provisions.
Caps on expenditure
7.48
The case for implementing caps on expenditure on
government advertising was put most comprehensively to the Committee by Dr
Graeme Orr, Senior
Lecturer, Law, Griffith University.[283]
7.49
Dr Orr's
view is that the 'real problem is not government advertising occasionally
straying into the political, but the great inflation in expenditure on it'.[284] According to Dr
Orr, it is probably true that all government
advertising, however bland, can generate some goodwill towards the government.
Therefore, he maintained, the problem of 'incumbency benefit' from government
advertising is a problem of its quantity or cumulative effect as much as its
quality or overtly political tone.
7.50
For that reason, Dr
Orr suggested that rather than focusing so
heavily on guidelines for the content
of government advertising, Parliament should legislate caps on its expenditure.
He said:
Caps could include specific tailored allocations for certain
unexceptionable and recurrent types of advertising: eg. government recruitment
(including defence) and citizenship drives. Alternatively caps could be worded
so as to apply to all advertising except
such nominated types of advertising.[285]
7.51
The advantage of this approach, noted Dr Orr, is that caps
are a 'bright-line' approach, compared to the more subjective task of
determining undue 'politicalness' in particular campaigns.[286] They allow Parliament to be involved
in determining 'what is a reasonable limit on government advertising', but they
allow the government to retain the discretion to prioritise and control
expenditure on particular information activities. Dr
Orr suggested that:
Any campaigns in excess of the periodic limit set would have to
be the subject of specific debate and authorisation by Parliament. It ought
become parliamentary convention that only truly exceptional events should
justify a particular proposed campaign being the subject of funding above the
cap.[287]
7.52
Dr Orr noted that this system could operate in tandem
with a set of guidelines covering the content of government advertisements, and
that such guidelines might still be required to the extent that 'government
advertising acts out a "permanent campaign" tactic'. Nevertheless, he
argued that caps could take much of the 'sting' out the problem, 'which lies in
the cumulative cost and effect of excessive expenditure, and the
"spikes" prior to elections'.[288]
7.53
The Committee agrees with Dr
Orr that the cumulative effect of large-scale
government advertising campaigns may itself purchase political goodwill for the
government, even if the content of these advertisements is not overtly
partisan. The Committee also agrees that an advantage of Dr
Orr's proposal is that it takes the pressure
away from finding a suitable mechanism for evaluating the partisan-political
nature of particular government advertising campaigns.
7.54
However, apart from the practical difficulties of
implementing the required legislation, the Committee has some concern about the
underlying principles of this approach.
7.55
Effectively, the proposal would see the power of the
executive to determine its expenditure priorities ceded to the Parliament. Dr
Orr argued that 'Parliament is sovereign as
regards appropriations, and it is parliamentary democracy that is most at risk
from partisan abuse of government advertising by the executive'.[289] The Committee considers, though,
that while it is true that Parliament approves proposed government expenditure
through the appropriations process,[290]
that is not the same thing as having the Parliament itself pre-emptively
determine the quantum of expenditure that should be allowed to the government
for particular functions for which it is responsible.
7.56
The Committee does not consider that introducing a
system of Parliamentary caps on expenditure on government advertising is either
practically feasible, or consistent with the underlying principles of
Parliamentary control of government expenditure.
Further disclosure provisions
7.57
At present, disclosure of expenditure on government
advertising is made in the annual reports of each government department or
agency. A total figure for the amount of government advertising expenditure put
through the Central Advertising System is also provided in PM&C's annual
report.
7.58
As noted in Chapter 2, nowhere is there at present
provided:
-
a total figure for the amount spent on
government advertising across all agencies;
-
a total figure for each department or agency for
the amount spent on government advertising; or
-
a total consolidated figure for the amount spent
on each campaign.
7.59
Nor is it possible from the information provided to
calculate any of those figures with any degree of confidence.
7.60
As a matter of routine accountability, no detailed
information is provided about the rationale or market research justifying the
need for particular government advertising campaigns, no information is
provided about any cost-benefit analysis of proposed campaigns or campaign
strategies, and there are no published evaluations of their effectiveness.
7.61
The Committee considered two main proposals for
improving the disclosure of information about government advertising campaigns.
They were the Senate resolution of 29
October 2003, and the Canadian government model.
Senate resolution of 29 October 2003
7.62
The Senate resolution of 29 October 2003 requires that a statement be tabled in
the Senate for each advertising or public information project undertaken by any
agency, where the cost of the project is estimated or contracted to be $100,000
or more. The statement is to be tabled within five sitting days of the Senate
after the project is approved and must indicate the following:
- the purpose and nature of the project;
- the intended recipients of the information to be
communicated by the project;
- who authorised the project;
- the manner in which the project is to be carried out;
- who is to carry out the project;
- whether the project is to be carried out under a contract;
- whether such contract was let by tender;
- the estimated or contracted cost of the project;
- whether every part of the project conforms with the Audit
and JCPAA guidelines; and
- if the project in any part does not conform with those
guidelines, the extent of, and reasons for, the nonconformity.[291]
7.63
The government declined to comply with this resolution
on 12 February 2004. In a
statement to the Senate, Senator the Hon. Robert Hill said that the government
had provided information about government advertising and information projects
through the Senate order on departmental and agency contracts, departmental and
agency annual reports, and through the gazettal of contracts on the internet.
He also cited the mechanisms of questions on notice and Senate estimates
hearings as additional sources of information on these matters.
7.64
Senator Hill noted that the government had not adopted
either the Auditor-General's or the JCPAA's guidelines on government advertising.
He concluded that:
The government continues to support a broad approach which
allows detailed scrutiny and accountability but avoids duplication and
unnecessary complexity and cost. Therefore our position is that the existing
levels of scrutiny should continue and will be underpinned by the former
government's 1995 guidelines in relation to implementing government
communication activities.[292]
7.65
The Committee acknowledges that some, though by no
means all, of the information required by the Senate's resolution is available through the mechanisms
outlined in Senator Hill's statement.[293]
In fact, since most of this information is not
provided through standard reporting mechanisms such as annual reports,
questions on notice and Senate estimates hearings are the primary sources for
it.
7.66
However, almost as important for accountability
purposes as the availability of
information, is the timeliness of the
provision of that information. In seeking a consolidated statement of the
state-of-play of government advertising arrangements on a regular basis, the
Senate is seeking the information it needs to monitor the government's
advertising activities as they are being developed.
7.67
Senator Murray,
for example, lodged questions on notice to all departments and agencies requiring
the same information as the Senate's resolution in May 2004. The complete set
of answers to those questions still had not been provided by May 2005, even
though the failure of the departments to provide the answers had been raised
during Senate Estimates hearings in November 2004 and February 2005.[294] Delays of this nature mean that it
may be impossible for the Parliament to react in a timely way to the misuse of
public funds on politically motivated government advertising campaigns. This
sort of delay does not reflect well on the government either, and adds to the
perception of a politicised process.
7.68
The Committee notes that the information required by
the Senate resolution is significantly less than would be required to answer
the key questions identified by the Clerk of the Senate in his submission to the
Committee and discussed in Chapter 3.[295]
In the Committee's view the provision of this information would not be
sufficient to ensure full parliamentary accountability in relation to
government advertising. Nevertheless, it may be sufficient to allow parliament
to identify emerging problems which require further scrutiny. Mr
Evans said:
The rationale of the resolution is that the particular
information required might signal possible problems with particular projects
which could then be selected for more intense scrutiny. For example, if a large
contract was let without tenders being called, this could indicate a possible
problem requiring further information.
This is a satisfactory basis for parliamentary scrutiny of all
kinds. It is not possible for the Parliament to require full details of
everything or to fully scrutinise everything. The sound approach is to require
basic information about government activities and select possible problem areas
for closer examination.[296]
7.69
For this reason, the Committee considers that, if the
government were to comply with this resolution, it would significantly improve
the parliament's capacity to hold the government to account in relation to its
government advertising program. The Committee urges the government to comply
with the Senate resolution of 29
October 2003.
Canadian Government model
7.70
The Canadian Government introduced radical changes to
its government communication and advertising processes in 2003-04.[297] The Committee understands that these
changes were driven by controversy over its contracting arrangements and a
detailed and highly critical report on the government's advertising activities
by the Canadian auditor-general.[298] Dr
Sally Young
indicated in evidence to the Committee that, in her view, the new Canadian
system is 'exemplary in terms of mechanisms in place to ensure transparency and
accountability in regard to government advertising'.[299]
7.71
There are three key features of the disclosure regime
now operating in Canada,
which the Committee considers are worthy of serious consideration. They are:
-
annual reports on government advertising;
-
annual reports on public opinion research; and
-
publication of other relevant information.[300]
7.72
The Canadian Government produces an annual report specifically
on government advertising, which consolidates and provides information about
all government advertising activities for the financial year. This report provides
a comprehensive summary of major campaigns run, a complete list of expenditure
by each government organisation on advertising services including the costs of
planning, creation, production, and media placement of advertisements, a list
of the suppliers used by the Government of Canada, a diagram showing the
percentage of advertising expenditure by media type, and a table showing advertising
expenditure per month.[301] Extracts of
this part of the annual report are at Appendix 6.
7.73
The report also contains an appendix with detailed
information about major campaigns. This information includes a statement of the
objectives of the campaign, the target audience, a detailed breakdown of media
placement, evaluation of the campaign including information about the
methodology used and the measurable results, and a breakdown of the costs into
'production', 'media placement' and 'evaluative research'.[302] Extracts of this part of the annual
report are at Appendix 7.
7.74
In relation to public opinion and market research, the
Committee has earlier noted the potential for research purchased with taxpayer
funds to be used for partisan advantage. As Dr
Sally Young
noted in her submission, this research is 'potentially of great benefit when
research such as focus groups, opinion polls and surveys drive political party
strategy, planning, campaigning and advertising'.[303]
7.75
The Canadian Government communications policy
specifically encourages public opinion research to be undertaken in the
development of programs, policies and services. This research is coordinated
and managed by a central agency within government, to ensure procurement of the
best value for money services and also to foster the sharing of research across
the Government of Canada.
7.76
Importantly, this central agency is responsible for
ensuring that research reports are available to the public through the National
Library of Canada and the Library of Parliament. This means that research
purchased with public funds is able to be read and made use of by the public.
7.77
The central agency also produces the annual report on
public opinion research on behalf of the government. This report provides
information including the total government expenditure on public opinion
research, expenditure by agency, a breakdown of the type of research commissioned
including the expenditure on research for advertising as a percentage of total
research costs, highlights of key research projects, and a listing of research
firms used by business volume.[304]
7.78
Finally, other relevant information made publicly
available by the Canadian Government includes:
-
posting all advertising contracts awarded through
the 'Communication Procurement Directorate' on the Contracts Canada website,
and all those above $10,000 on departmental websites; and
-
posting all approved advertising funding on the
Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat's website.[305]
7.79
In addition to these disclosure measures, the Committee
was impressed by a number of the objectives that the Canadian Government had
set for itself in order to improve accountability for government advertising
expenditure. In particular, the Committee notes the stated objectives of:
-
reducing spending (including through a 15
percent reduction in the amount spent on media placement, representing a
savings of $36 million over three years);
-
reallocating advertising resources from lower to
higher priorities;
-
producing fewer and more effective campaigns;
-
focussing primarily on programs and services;
and
-
ongoing monitoring of results.[306]
Conclusion
7.80
In this chapter, the Committee has considered possible
mechanisms for enforcing compliance with guidelines on government advertising,
as well as other accountability measures.
Recommendation 5
7.81
The Committee recommends that the government implement,
as a matter of urgency, a mechanism to monitor and enforce compliance with
guidelines on government advertising activity.
7.82
The Committee considers that there are two measures
that will most effectively enhance the accountability framework for government
advertising.
7.83
The first of these measures is monitoring of and reporting
by the Auditor-General on the government's compliance with revised guidelines.
Recommendation 6
7.84
The Committee recommends that once an advertising
campaign valued at $250,000 or more has been given final approval by the MCGC,
the advertisements must be submitted to the Auditor-General by the department
that is incurring the expenditure. The Auditor-General must report back to the
department and the portfolio minister as soon as possible whether the campaign
complies with the revised guidelines on government advertising, and the extent
of any non-compliance.
Recommendation 7
7.85
The Committee recommends that every six months the
Auditor-General must table a report in the Parliament which details his or her
assessment against the guidelines of the advertising campaigns that have been
implemented during that six-month period.
Recommendation 8
7.86
The Committee recommends that if a department continues
with a campaign that the Auditor-General has assessed as not complying with the
guidelines, and has provided reasons for that course of action, the
Auditor-General must include the departmental response in the tabled report. If
a department has amended a campaign in the light of the Auditor-General's initial
assessment, the Auditor-General will not table the initial report but only the
final assessment made of the campaign.
7.87
The second measure required to enhance the
accountability framework for government advertising is substantially increased
disclosure of information about advertising expenditure.
7.88
The Committee is of the view that the Senate Order of 29 October 2003 relating to
advertising projects goes some way to identifying the information that is
required for effective parliamentary scrutiny in this area. In particular, by
requiring that a statement of information about advertising projects be tabled
within five sitting days of the Senate after the project is approved, the
Senate Order ensures that the Parliament is able to monitor the government's
major advertising expenditure and activities on a reasonably contemporaneous
basis.
7.89
The Committee rejects the government's assertion that
the information required by the Senate Order can be discovered by the
Parliament by other means within the stated timeframe.
Recommendation 9
7.90
The Committee recommends that the government comply
with the Senate Order of 29 October
2003 relating to agency advertising and public information
projects.
7.91
The Committee considers that, although a
necessary first step in improving government accountability for its advertising
activities, the Senate Order is not sufficient to ensure that all essential
information is provided. In particular, the Committee notes that the following
information is required for minimum accountability to the Parliament:
-
a total figure for the amount spent each
financial year on government advertising across all agencies;
-
a total figure for each department or agency for
the amount spent each financial year on government advertising; and
-
a total consolidated figure for the amount spent
on each campaign.
7.92
Also required is an appropriate level of transparency
about the rationale or market research justifying the need for particular
government advertising campaigns, any cost-benefit analysis of proposed
campaigns or campaign strategies, and evaluations of their effectiveness.
7.93
The Committee considers that the new Canadian system of
disclosure of information about government advertising is exemplary and should
provide a model for the Australian government.
Recommendation 10
7.94
The Committee recommends that the Government
Communications Unit in the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet publish
an annual report on government advertising, commencing in financial year 2005-06.
The annual report should be modelled on the Annual Report on the Government of Canada's
Advertising 2003-04. It should include:
-
a total figure for government expenditure on
advertising activities;
-
total figures by agency for expenditure on
advertising activities;
-
figures for expenditure on media placement by
type and media placement by month; and
-
detailed information about major campaigns,
including a statement of the objectives of the campaign, the target audience, a
detailed breakdown of media placement, evaluation of the campaign including
information about the methodology used and the measurable results, and a
breakdown of the costs into 'production', 'media placement' and 'evaluative
research'.
Recommendation 11
7.95
The Committee recommends that from financial year
2005-06 the annual reports of each government agency must include:
-
a total figure for the agency's advertising
expenditure; and
-
a consolidated figure for the cost for each campaign
managed by that agency.
Recommendation 12
7.96
The Committee recommends that from financial year
2005-06 the annual reports of each government agency must include:
-
a total figure for departmental expenditure on
public opinion research;
-
a breakdown of the type of research, including
the expenditure on research for advertising as a percentage of total research
costs;
-
highlights of key research projects; and
-
a listing of research firms used by business
volume.
Recommendation 13
7.97
The Committee recommends that public opinion and market
research commissioned by government departments be made available by
departments to the public through the National Library of Australia
and the Parliamentary Library.
Senator
Michael Forshaw
Chair
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