*Press Release *

 *Companies Act 2015 continues to facilitate corporate funding for
political parties and co-option of NGOs*


 *Provision for CSR in the Act needed to be revisited *


 May 28, 2-015: The Companies (Amendment) Act, 2015 has received the assent
of the President. It has been notified in the Official Gazette with effect
from 26th May, 2015. Companies (Amendment) Bill, 2014 which was introduced
to amend Companies Act, 2013 was approved by the Lok Sabha on17th December,
2014 and by the Rajya Sabha on 13th May, 2015. This Act along with the 2013
Act merits attention of all the lovers of true democracy. Notably, the
Contesting Election on Government Expenses Bill, 2012 is pending in the
Rajya Sabha which was long due for putting a check on increasing use of
black money in elections and political activities but the Companies Act has
emerged as a threat to the idea of State funding of elections. Yet another
opportunity has been lost to deal with the menace of black money with the
passage of the Act.

Union Cabinet chaired by the Prime Minister, Narendra Modi gave its
approval for the Companies (Amendment) Bill, 2014 on 29th April, 2015. With
this 2013 Act has received the seal of approval from the NDA government. There
was a need for replacing corporate donation for political parties with
provision of corporate donation for government's electoral fund that can be
used for State funding of elections. But the government accepted the status
quo in general.  Thus, regime has changed but the order has remained the
same.

The Companies Act reveals double speak, insincerity and inconsistency of
the ruling parties and opposition parties. The Companies Act should have
banned corporate funding for electoral campaigns but this has not happened.
This is contrary to several reports of the Parliamentary and government's
committees which recommended State funding of elections to deal with black
money.

The root of rampant corporate crimes committed with impunity, environmental
destruction, poisoning of food chain and human rights violations by
security forces has been traced to corporate funding of political parties.
In the aftermath of industrial disasters, frauds and war crimes by
companies world over, this Act merits rigorous scrutiny by all sections of
legislatures and society.

It may be noted that there is a provision in the Act that reads:
"Notwithstanding anything contained in any other provision of this Act, a
company, other than a Government company and a company which has been in
existence for less than three financial years, may contribute any amount
directly or indirectly to any political party: Provided that the amount
referred to in sub-section (1) or, as the case may be, the aggregate of the
amount which may be so contributed by the company in any financial year
shall not exceed seven and a half per cent of its average net profits
during the three immediately preceding financial years".

It may be recalled that two contradictory things happened in the Lok Sabha
on 14th December, 2011. Companies Bill, 2011 was introduced by Dr Veerappa
Moily as a Union Minister in the afternoon that made provision for
corporate funding of parties. Within hours of the introduction of this
Bill, Manish Tiwari, National Spokesperson of the Indian National Congress
who stood up to speak about UPA's seriousness in dealing about Black money
stated, "I feel ashamed to state that black money which is linked to our
advertisement policy is related to electoral finance that needs to be
rectified."

The 2013 Act was passed with the endorsement of Yashwant Sinha headed
Parliamentary Standing Committee on Finance. The 2015 Act has the
endorsement of Indian National Congress in the Parliament.

The collusion between major parties that was witnessed in the report
Indrajit Gupta headed Parliamentary Committee remains unaltered. The
silence of the left parties is quite deafening in this regard. In the light
of this development, the reluctance of the political parties except
Communist Party of India to come under the ambit of Right to Information
Act is not inexplicable.

The Act gives greater role to shareholders and promotes shareholder
democracy of sort.

It is explicable as to this government forgot about the recommendations of
the Group of Ministers (GoM), headed by the then Union Home Minister, L.K.
Advani, to consider recommendations of the Indrajit Gupta headed Committee
on State funding of elections during the Bhartiya Janata Party led National
Democratic Alliance (NDA) Government. The Committee on State Funding of
Election was headed by the former Union Home Minister and veteran CPI
leader, Indrajit Gupta, had submitted its report to the Government on 14th
January, 1999 favouring State funding of elections.

It merits recalling that at the Convention of Indian Youth Congress on
November 29, 2011, Sonia Gandhi, Chairman, Indian National Congress
reiterated the need for state financing of elections as a measure against
corruption in the electoral process. Earlier, she had demanded it at the
Congress plenary in December 2010. The Union Minister for Law & Justice
informed the Lok Sabha on November 28, 2011 that --Group of Ministers
constituted by the Central Government is considering measures that can be
taken by the Government to tackle corruption which inter alia include the
introduction of state funding of elections. The Act shows that what Sonia
Gandhi had told the Convention of Indian Youth Congress has not been
incorporated in the Act. BJP led NDA government wasted the opportunity of
rectifying the Act.

It is evident that both Congress led UPA and BJP led NDA are preaching one
thing and practicing just the contrary. The passage of this legislation
re-legitimizes corporate funding of political parties instead of reversing
the trend.

There is a provision in the Ac which appears quite dangerous. It reads: The
Board of Directors of a company may contribute to bona fide charitable and
other funds: Provided that prior permission of the company in general
meeting shall be required for such contribution in case any amount the
aggregate of which, in any financial year, exceed five per cent of its
average net profits for the three immediately preceding financial years."
This is a masterstroke to co-opt bonafide charitable institutions and turn
them into fake public interest institutions who serve corporate interests.
Both are divergent interests for sure.

While the hollowness of Concept of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
which is an exercise in advertising and brand positioning is well known,
the same has been introduced in the Companies Act. The provision regarding
CSR reads" Every company having net worth of rupees five hundred crore or
more, or turnover of rupees one thousand crore or more or a net profit of
rupees five crore or more during any financial year shall constitute a
Corporate Social Responsibility Committee of the Borad consisting of three
or more directors, out of which at least one director shall be an
independent director. The Board's report shall disclose the composition of
the Corporate Social Responsibility Committee. The Corporate Social
Responsibility Committee shall,--(a) formulate and recommend to the Board, a
Corporate Social Responsibility Policy which shall indicate the activities
to be undertaken by the compay as specified in Schedule VII the company
spends, in every financial year, at least two per cent of the average net
profits of the company made during the three immediately preceding
financial years, in pursuance of its Corporate Social Responsibility
Policy.

Notably, Schedule VII mentioned in the clause provides a list of
"Activities which may be included by companies in their Corporate Social
Responsibility Policies" These activities relate to:-- (i) eradicating
extreme hunger and poverty; (ii) promotion of education; (iii) promoting
gender equality and empowering women; (iv) reducing child mortality and
improving maternal health; (v) combating human immunodeficiency virus,
acquired immune deficiency syndrome, malaria and other diseases; (vi)
ensuring environmental sustainability; (vii) employment enhancing
vocational skills; (viii) social business projects; (ix) contribution to
the Prime Minister's National Relief Fund or any other fund set up by the
Central Government or the State Governments for socioeconomic development
and relief and funds for the welfare of the Scheduled Castes, the Scheduled
Tribes, other backward classes, minorities and women; and (x) such other
matters as may be prescribed.

The activities that have been mentioned above are functions of the State
towards the citizens. This is a case of outsourcing functions of the
government to companies. It may have been better if instead of letting
companies do CSR activities if the same 2 % of their annual profit is
collected as tax to create a fund for undertaking state funding of
elections? Prime Minister's National Relief Fund itself can collect it as
Government of India did acting as parens patriae (guardian of the nation),
passed the Bhopal Gas Disaster (Processing of Claims) Act, 1985 in the case
against USA's Union Carbide Corporation, currently owned by USA's Dow
Chemicals Company. A five judge bench of the Supreme Court upheld that the
State had rightly taken over the exclusive right to represent and act on
behalf of every person entitled to make a claim in the Charan Lal Sahu Vs
Union of India and others on 22 December, 1989. The Companies Bill should
provide for "creation of an Industrial Disaster Fund" to comply with this
very order in the aftermath of world worst industrial disaster before the
nuclear disasters of Chernobyl and Fukushima.

The political parties that will collect up to 7.5 % of annual profits of
the companies as donations will not have the political will to regulate CSR
activities and will not be able to acts in any case. A regime that is
elected based on state funding of elections can undertake the above welfare
activities and act as a genuine parens patriae. Citizens rightfully deserve
it. The proposal of such CSR activities as acts of charity is an assault on
provisions of the constitution that provides for entitlements for life and
environment as a fundamental right.

The provision of corporate funding for political parties must be looked at
in the backdrop of the decision of Supreme Court of USA on January 21, 2010
in the Citizens United case, which was denounced by US President Barack
Obama, apparently for the sake of record. The US Court considered whether
there could be a ban on corporations using their general treasury funds for
elections-related expenditure. A majority (5-4) of the Court ruled that
such a ban was violative of the right to free speech. Essentially, the US
Court struck down certain campaign-finance limits as a violation. The
impact of this ruling is that corporate entities in the USA are free to use
their general treasury funds to incur election-related expenditure, in a
departure from past precedents. It also raised a question do corporations
have free-speech rights, just as do individuals? If this is the path of
corporations very soon, indeed "We The People" will be excluded from even
representative government because of Corporate Personhood. It was said in
the newspapers in USA that it would turn the political class into
prostitutes.

In connection with this, the six page long The Contesting Election on
Government Expenses Bill, introduced by Prabhat Jha, Member of Parliament
merits attention.

Contrary to the wisdom of the Bill, this Act is aimed at doing away with
the requirement for filing a declaration by a company before commencement
of business or exercising its borrowing powers and rationalizing the
procedure for laying draft notifications granting exemptions to various
classes of companies or modifying provisions of the Act in Parliament, in
order to ensure speedier issue of final notifications. This Bill reveals
the incestuous relationship between business enterprises and the ruling
parties.

Instead of setting matters right, the official amendments contained in the
2015 Act addresses issues related to ease of doing business and puts in
place a speedier process for approval of draft notifications for providing
exemptions etc. from specific provisions of the Act to a class of
companies.

There is a logical compulsion for amending the Companies Act to outlaw the
provision for corporate funding to political parties and substitute it with
the provision of state funding for the political parties as envisaged in
The Contesting Election on Government Expenses Bill.

Following footsteps of the trends in USA, the provisions in the Companies
Bill is all set to turn most political parties into brothels wherein
made-to-order legislations will have a field day if it is not the case
already. Given this trend will it be surprising if very soon there will be
approval for foreign direct investments in myriad disguises to facilitate
setting up of legislation manufacturing factories?

Democratic institutions can only be strengthened if political parties and
other political organizations are given a priority by the state through
fiscal support for becoming a democracy given the fact that it is always a
work in progress. Studies based on large data sets on political financing
in more than 40 democracies provide empirical account of campaign finance
and have brought to light hidden aspects of politics and questioning
widespread beliefs about political finance, such as the rapid increase of
campaign costs. The problems associated with the high cost of election
campaigns and the establishment of a balanced and transparent system for
their financing merit state's attention.

The experience from contemporary European democracies shows that political
parties are necessary and desirable institutions for democracy and direct
involvement of the state through financing election campaigns is
transforming parties from their status as voluntary private associations
into parties as public utilities.

The legislation in question does not appreciate that it is the dependence
of political parties on non-state actors for financing elections that
determines their electoral and non-electoral performance. It is a flawed
legislation which is compromising the political outcomes through an
inherent political engineering which is co-terminus with property based
citizens' rights.

While it has been admitted that --there is no guarantee that economic
prosperity ensures democratization, the ulterior motive of the sponsors of
electoral reforms is the former and not the latter. In the post-Citizens
United era and in the era of legislated corporate funding through Companies
Act is an act of rewriting the political geography and will reveal its
residual democratic content.

By shaping not only the strategies, rational choice but also their goals,
political parties as institutions structure political situations and leave
their own imprint on political outcomes. This significance underlines the
inference that parties cannot be left at the mercy of non-state actors. As
long as these actors shape the outcome no matter who wins in electoral
battles, democracy is not a winner because our deformed political system is
turning legislatures into a forum for legalized bribery. The way out could
be to recommend that these very corporate donations be pooled into an
electoral fund which can be used for state funding of elections.




*For Details*: Gopal Krishna, ToxicsWatch Alliance (TWA), Mb: 08227816731,
09818089660, [email protected], Web: www.toxicswatch.org




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