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How Pressure Groups Influence

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Insider Influence

Pressure groups try to influence parliament to push for changes to be made to certain laws or to raise the profile of issues within Parliament.

Direct access to decision-makers

Direct access to decision-makers

  • Pressure groups with access to key political decision-makers, such as the prime minister and cabinet ministers, can directly argue for their cause and interest.
  • Governments consult (ask advice of) certain pressure groups because of their policy expertise.
  • The government can use pressure groups to assess the reaction of affected groups to potential government policies.
    • The CBI in economic, industrial and trade policy and the BMA in health policy have direct influence.
Lobbying

Lobbying

  • Pressure groups can try to influence through hiring lobbyists who are individuals that work to put pressure on the government and influence them.
Influencing MPs

Influencing MPs

  • Pressure groups try to influence MPs in the House of Commons and members of select committees to make sure group interests are represented in the bills debates and law-making.
  • Groups may also try to influence members of the House of Lords when the chamber is debating and proposing bill revisions.
Influencing parties

Influencing parties

  • Pressure groups try to influence the policy of a party and have their issue represented in the party’s manifesto.
  • If a party is elected, their issue may be in government policy.
  • Influence can be exerted in the form of funding a party or voting at a party conference.
  • Examples:
    • Momentum and the Labour Party.
    • Centre for Policy Studies and the Conservatives.

Influencing Politics Outside Parliament

Pressure groups can influence decision-makers outside of parliamentary routes.

Protest

Protest

  • Pressure groups use legal forms of protest with the aim of gaining publicity and support to win over public opinion.
  • Public opinion can be used to put pressure on political decision makers.
  • Protest is often used by outsider groups.
  • One example of protest is an open protest, in which pressure groups take part in marches and demonstrations with the purpose of increasing the public awareness of their issue.
Examples of protest

Examples of protest

  • Fathers4Justice marched outside former PM David Cameron’s home in Oxfordshire in 2011 to demonstrate their anger at his article which labelled men who abandon their families as “Feckless Fathers” who “should be looked at like drink drivers”.
  • The pressure group Hacked Off had a petition signed by 175,000 people in 2013 for the recommendations from the Leveson Inquiry into phone hacking to be implemented.
Direct action

Direct action

  • Direct action is a form of political protest that can involve civil disobedience, illegal methods or violence.
  • The aim of direct action is to raise the profile of the pressure group’s cause attraction through local or national media coverage.
Examples of direct action

Examples of direct action

  • Fathers4Justice carried out a publicity stunt in which a member of the group scaled Buckingham Palace balcony dressed as Batman.
  • The Animal Liberation Front has carried out attacks on homes of people with connections to pharmaceutical research laboratories using animals as part of their research.

Factors Affecting Pressure Group Success

Several factors can affect how successful pressure groups are in influencing politics or changing public opinion.

Public support

Public support

  • Popular campaigns that play on public desires, fears or contemporary issues are more likely to gather attention.
  • Media coverage can change how the public sees a pressure group.
Membership size

Membership size

  • Large groups can demonstrate that the issue affects a significant population.
Access to decision-makers

Access to decision-makers

  • Insider access to decision-makers will increase the likelihood of changing political opinions.
Resources

Resources

  • Larger groups have more members to campaign for them (human capital).
  • More members paying fees means that a campaign can become more organised - by having an office and paying for adverts.
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