It has until the middle of November to register with the AEC if its election spending exceeded the

$13,800 cap set by the commission for third parties. However, it has not yet revealed whether it will

seek such registration. In response to questions from the Herald, the alliance would not reveal how much it paid the US developer of the app, saying this was “commercial in confidence”. Founder Tim Andrews resides in Washington and works as the executive director of a powerful allied American lobby group, the Taxpayers Protection Alliance, which shares the ATA’s low-taxing and anti "nanny state" agenda. Despite his American domicile and lobbying role in Washington, Mr Andrews still holds the post of

ATA president as well as being sole director and shareholder of its corporate vehicle here, the Australian Taxpayers Alliance Pty Ltd. Tim Andrews, president of the Australian Taxpayers' Alliance and executive director of Washington-based Taxpayers Protection Alliance. Credit:Twitter

Australian federal electoral law bans foreign donations, but appears to have no issue with a key

executive of an overseas lobby group also holding office in a domestic political organisation which seeks to influence the outcome of Australian elections. Asked if it had a role in this situation, the AEC told the Herald, “the internal structure of Australian organisations does not fall within the remit of the Electoral Act”. Mr Andrews told the Herald from Washington that raising the question of his dual roles was “utterly

contemptible” and “tinged with pretty obvious nativism”. “To say that, because at the end of last year I relocated to the United States to allow my wife to

pursue career opportunities … I should suddenly stop caring about the country I grew up in and

deeply love is … not just the height of stupidity but ethically repulsive.” He said his role with ATA was now “limited to oversight”.

The spotlight has fallen on the alliance's finances after a submission to parliament’s Joint Standing Committee on Electoral Matters by progressive umbrella group, the Tax Justice Network. The network, which includes organisations like the ACTU, Caritas, GetUp! and Friends of the Earth, has urged the parliamentary committee to investigate the ATA’s funding sources, claiming the alliance is part of a “network of organisations that has close links to foreign backed political lobby groups”. The TJN has zeroed in on the links between the ATA, its affiliated organisations and the vaping

movement. The alliance's Sydney-based executive director Brian Marlow also heads up Legalise Vaping Australia, the nation’s “largest pro-vaping advocacy group” which wants nicotine in vaping products to become legal without prescription – a goal shared by tobacco companies. Questions are rising about the safety of vaping. Credit:AP

In the US, Mr Andrews is the public voice of lobbying efforts by the Taxpayers Protection Alliance

to thwart the Trump Administration’s plans to outlaw flavoured vaping products, which health

authorities there have linked to serious lung disease. A TJN spokesman, tax analyst Jason Ward, said “the championing by the ATA of a pro-tobacco industry agenda and the funding by big tobacco of US groups closely aligned with the ATA raises serious concerns. "The public has a right to know where the funding comes from." But Mr Andrews told the Herald that “despite the wild allegations of tin-foil-hat wearing conspiracy

theorists” the ATA did not receive donations from “the Koch [brothers] Network, Big Oil and the tobacco industry ... [or] any foreign funding for any of our political activities.” He conceded that "we do receive some access to a social media consultant via BAT [British American Tobacco] who we are happy to occasionally take advice from."

"We have also received some airfares from international non-profits to attend training conferences as well as some sponsorships to allow students to attend our annual Friedman conference." Mr Marlow said Legalise Vaping took money from individual vaping shops but not tobacco companies. The ATA lists 10 staff, yet is not registered for GST which means its turnover does not exceed $150,000 a year. Asked how it could afford 10 staff, Mr Marlow said some were unpaid interns, some were part-time and some contractors. He said staff costs were an “internal” matter but insisted they were below $150,000 annually. Asked about his organisation’s overall budget, he said it was “somewhere between heaps and a lot” sourced from “thousands” of “hard-working Australians”. Mr Andrews, 36, is highly networked with other conservative organisations in Australia and overseas. He sits on the board of the HR Nicholls Society, the Australian Libertarian Society, and co-

convenes the Friedman conference, described as “the largest libertarian conference in the Asia-

Pacific”. Menzies House and MyChoice Australia are other conservatively aligned ATA projects.