US voices concern over Chinese money in Australian politics
Canberra, Sep 14: The American ambassador to Australia has voiced US concerns over China's impact on Australian politics, saying the United States wants the system reformed to remove the influence of Chinese political donations.
Ambassador John Berry said in an interview with The Australian newspaper that the United States is "surprised" by the amount of Chinese money and influence in Australian politics and wants Australia to resolve the foreign donation issue.

The embassy confirmed in a statement that Berry had been accurately quoted in the interview, published today.
Last week, the opposition Labor Party called for foreign political donations to be banned after Labour Sen Sam Dastyari stepped down from a senior role for asking a Chinese company to pay a 1,670 Australian dollar (USD 1,250) travel bill.
While Dastyari broke no law, he acknowledged that having the Sydney-based company Top Education Institute pay a personal bill was wrong.
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull pointed to a Chinese language news report that quoted Dastyari as saying, "The South China Sea is China's own affair."
Turnbull said that statement contradicted both the government and the opposition's foreign policy position that China should respect international law in territorial disputes.
The prime minister accused Dastyari, who has been dubbed Shanghai Sam, of saying what Chinese donors paid him to say.
Dastyari said he might have misspoken during the Chinese interview, but said he supported his party's policy.
The issue is broader than Dastyari, with Top Education Institute donating more than AUD 230,000 to both Labour and the ruling conservative Liberal Party.
Unlike the United States, which bans foreign donations, Australian law has never distinguished between donors from Australia and overseas.
Berry said the United States hopes that Australia will protect its "core responsibilities against undue influence from governments that don't share our values."
He said the US objects to Beijing being able to fund political candidates in an Australian election campaign to advance Chinese interests.
"That, to us, is of concern," Berry said in the newspaper interview. "We cannot conceive of a case where a foreign donation from any government, friend or foe, would be considered legitimate in terms of that democracy."
"We have been surprised, quite frankly, at the extent of the involvement of the Chinese government in Australian politics," he added.
PTI
-
Gold Rate In Bangalore Today, 2 April 2026: IBJA Benchmark Rates, Bhima, Abharan, Jos Alukkas, GRT Prices -
Hyderabad Gold Silver Rate Today, 3 April 2026: Fresh Gold and Silver Rates in the City -
Purple Halcyon Aka Ashwani A: Who Is This Instagram Viral Girl Earning ₹70 Lakh via Subscriptions? -
Civil Defence Mock Drill in Delhi At 8 PM Today: Full Schedule of Locations and Timings Released -
April 3 Dry Day In Tamil Nadu Or Not? Status of Bars, TASMAC & Liquor Shops On Good Friday -
Can Raghav Chadha Be The PM? How His Parliament Speeches On Real Issues Won Public Attention -
Hyderabad Gold Silver Rate Today, 2 April 2026: Know Latest Gold and Silver Prices In Nizam City -
Who Is Ashok Mittal? The Man Replacing Raghav Chadha In Rajya Sabha, From Sweet Shop Roots to Parliament -
Congress Candidate List for Tamil Nadu Elections 2026 Out - See Full List -
Petrol Price India Vs Pakistan: Why Fuel Is Cheaper In India Than Pak Despite Global Crisis -
Ramayana Teaser Review: Epic Ambition Meets Work-in-Progress Visuals As Ranbir Silences Critics -
New OTT Release This Week In Telugu, Hindi, Tamil, Marathi, Malayalam: 40 Movies & K Dramas To Watch












Click it and Unblock the Notifications