Difference between revisions of "Lobbying Portal"

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[[Image:WestminsterLobbyingMap.jpg|right|300px|To take a tour of some of the major lobbying firms, industry lobbying groups and think tanks that surround Parliament in central London, visit the [http://www.spinprofiles.org/index.php/Westminster_lobbying_map Westminster Lobbying Map]]]
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[[Image:WestminsterLobbyingMap.jpg|thumb|right|300px|To take a tour of some of the major lobbying firms, industry lobbying groups and think tanks that surround Parliament in central London, visit the [http://www.spinprofiles.org/index.php/Westminster_lobbying_map Westminster Lobbying Map]]]
 
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Revision as of 14:14, 8 May 2009

Welcome to the Lobbying Portal on SpinProfiles


Welcome to the Lobbying Portal on Spinprofiles—your guide to networks of power, lobbying and deceptive PR.

The Lobbying Portal aims to shine a light on the activities of the thousands of lobbyists-for-hire that operate in the UK, Brussels and, to an extent, Washington. It provides an A-Z of lobbying consultancies, as well as individual lobbyists, detailing specific examples of their work - including deceptive lobbying campaigns - as well as the so called 'revolving door' between politics and the lobbying industry. For industry-specific lobbying, visit the relevant SpinProfile portals (from the homepage or tag cloud).

SpinProfiles has a policy of strict referencing and is overseen by a managing editor and a sysop and several associate portal editors. The editor of the Lobbying Portal is Tamasin Cave tamasin.cave AT spinprofiles.org.

To take a tour of some of the major lobbying firms, industry lobbying groups and think tanks that surround Parliament in central London, visit the Westminster Lobbying Map

What is Lobbying?

Lobbying is any activity that seeks to influence government and public policy. Lobbying falls under a sub-sector of the Public Relations industry known as Public Affairs. A Public Affairs campaign will encompass a range of activities, of which forming relationships with politicians and government officials is just one. For example, a campaign may involve commissioning reports from think tanks, scientists or academics, which support a particular position. It may also involve using the media to influence public opinion to put pressure on politicians to act.

Successful lobbying depends greatly on people with political experience and those with contacts inside government. As such, there is a great deal of movement between the lobbying industry and the political class. Many professional lobbyists are former politicians or political staff who are employed because they understand the political process and enjoy access to their former colleagues on the inside.

The UK lobbying industry is worth around £1.9 billion in 2009, having doubled in size since the early nineties. People involved in the profession today range from consultant lobbyists, many of whom are employed by large PR firms, law firms or management consultancies, to in-house corporate lobbyists, business associations like the CBI, trade unions, NGOs, and think tanks.

What is wrong with the lobbying industry?

Unbalanced in favour of business: In a functioning democracy, everyone has the right to lobby – to present their case to government and Parliament in the hope of influencing their decisions. However, at the moment, the majority of lobbying is done by or on behalf of commercial interests. This has led to concerns of an imbalance between the access and influence of commercial interests and other, less well funded groups.

Commercial interests will lobby politicians and officials for a number of reasons. They may want to build reputation among decision-makers; secure public funding or win government contracts; or push for, amend or halt legislation and regulation in the interests of their business.

The estimated pay-off for such lobbying activity, based on figures from the US, is 1:100. For every $1 spent on lobbying activity, a business can expect a typical return of $100.

Opaque, unregulated, and unaccountable: Unlike in the US, which has disclosure rules for lobbyists in the form of a register, the industry in the UK is almost entirely unregulated, unaccountable, and operates largely out of sight. At the moment there is no way for politicians and the public to know who is lobbying whom, which areas of public life they are trying to influence, and how much money is being spent in the process.

Instead, lobbyists in the UK operate under a system of self-regulation, operated by three industry bodies: The Association of Professional Political Consultants (for public affairs consultancies), The Public Relations Consultants Association (for PR firms with a lobbying arm), and The Chartered Institute of Public Relations (for in-house PR people and lobbyists).

This system of self-regulation was condemned in a 2009 Parliamentary report into lobbying. The inquiry by the Public Administration Select Committee found it risked being “little better than the Emperor’s new clothes”. The cross-party Committee of MPs recommended instead that the UK government introduce a mandatory register of lobbying activity "to bring greater transparency to the dealings between Whitehall decision makers and outside interests."

Categories

There are a list of categories associated with this page:

See Also


New pages on Spinprofiles

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References and Resources

External websites:

Getting Started

Looking for somewhere to start?

To learn how you can edit any article right now, visit Spinprofiles:About, Welcome, newcomers, our Help page, Frequently Asked Questions, A quick guide to editing or experiment in the sandbox.

Or contribute a new article: go to Quick Guide to Getting Started.

Research and Writing Tips

How to research front groups | Resources for studying propaganda | Research using the web

Can you help?

Spinprofiles can be made more effective if more people join the project. If you have research or writing skills or just spare time, you can help.

If you are unsure where to start, you could expand some of the recently created but currently very brief articles. (If you look at the recent changes page you will see some noted as being 'stubs' - articles that may just be a line or two and needing to be fleshed out). So if you would like to add to some of those you would be most welcome.

There is an automatically updated page which includes the pages which have been signalled by Spinprofiles users as most wanted. In addition there is a page which includes a list of Things you can do to help.

Or if you would like some other suggestions closer to your interests you could drop Spinprofiles editor, David Miller an email. His address is editor AT spinprofiles.org

Start Here


Spinprofiles history

Spinprofiles is a collaborative venture initiated by Spinwatch in collaboration with Lobbywatch, GM Watch Red Star Research and Corporate Watch, but put into effect by a wide variety of volunteers and independent researchers.

Contributors are now working on 19,414 articles.

Disclaimer: Spinprofiles is an encyclopedia of people, issues and groups shaping the public agenda. It is a project of the Spinwatch—email editor AT spinprofiles.org.

Antispam note: To avoid attracting spam email robots, email addresses on Spinprofiles are written with AT in place of the usual symbol, and we have removed "mail to" links. Replace AT with the correct symbol to get a valid address. We regret the inconvenience this entails. Campaign for more effective antispam regulations.


References