If you find information that candidates are not allowed to receive donations from corporations, companies or business enterprises that are partly owned or controlled by the government, code “YES”. Also code “YES” if it is stated that such entities are banned from giving support, contributions or donations to candidates. Also code “YES” if legislation includes an exhaustive list of allowed sources of income for candidates, and this does not include the above. By an “exhaustive list” is meant where it is stated something like “candidates are only allowed to receive income from the following sources” or (more vague) “candidates may receive funding from the following sources”. If it says something like “allowed sources for candidates include...” it is not exhaustive. If you find information about allowed or banned sources for candidates and there is no mention about the sources mentioned above, code “NO”. If the regulations only ban donations from state-owned or public corporations etc, also code “NO”. Note that if you find information that funding from companies with partial government ownership is banned from being used in election campaigns, but it is not explicitly stated or clear from the context that it relates specifically to political parties or candidates, code “NO” for both this and the following question. Note that this question does not relate to donations from direct government sources such as ministries, government agencies or public companies (companies with full government ownership). This is addressed in Q64. If you have not found any information and you judge that there may likely be regulations you have not been able to access about this issue, code “ND”.
ban_partial_ownership_candidates
12. Is there a ban on donations from corporations with partial government ownership to candidates?
12
Text (with formatting)
none
No
Yes
Yes
No
No
No
Yes
No data
Not applicable
284663
No
No
Yes
12