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Marta Rychert & Chris Wilkins say lobbying regulations are vital to any well functioning democracy, so it’s time NZ got some

Public Policy / opinion
Marta Rychert & Chris Wilkins say lobbying regulations are vital to any well functioning democracy, so it’s time NZ got some
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By Marta Rychert & Chris Wilkins*

The recently announced review of New Zealand’s lobbying sector needs to tackle questions of transparency and access if it is to make any real difference to how industries influence decision making. This includes establishing an enforceable register of lobbyists and introducing a cooling off period for former politicians before they can begin lobbying.

The review was announced after revelations former police minister Stuart Nash shared confidential cabinet information with political donors. In the aftermath, Prime Minister Chris Hipkins requested lobbyists’ swipe-card access to Parliament be revoked. He also called on the lobbying industry to develop its own voluntary “code of conduct”.

Unlike many countries, New Zealand does not require lobbyists to register, disclose their clients or funding sources, or adhere to ethical standards.

But our research into alcohol, tobacco and cannabis industry lobbying highlights how corporations wield their influence over public officials and the public to achieve their interests.

The problems with political lobbying

On one hand, private sector engagement is often valuable and can lead to better government policies. Businesses have expertise that can help policymakers understand innovation and assess the feasibility of proposed policies.

Yet the political system is not always transparent and equally inclusive. Corporations have considerably more money, expertise and time than everyday citizens to engage with politicians.

This influence can result in weak and ineffectual responses from government, including decision makers deferring responses with long consultation periods or distant targets.

Tobacco lobbyists, for example, have long pushed back against plain packaging and tax increases on tobacco products, despite evidence of their effectiveness to reduce smoking harm. Instead, lobbyists have also argued that raising tobacco taxes merely contributes to a tobacco black market.

The dark art of influencing

Researchers looking at tobacco and alcohol lobbying have found corporate influence often involves long-term strategies rather than directly “visible” attempts to influence politicians.

One study in the United Kingdom showed how alcohol interests adopted a long-term strategy to influence policy. Personal contacts with key policymakers were nurtured well before they entered government.

This sort of relationship building can also include gift giving, from small consumables such as rugby tickets and dinner, to speaking roles, international travel, club membership and the promise of future employment.

Social media is also increasingly used in lobbying. Digital platforms offer opportunities to initiate, target and foster contacts between corporations and politicians. They can also be used to persuade the public to put pressure on policy makers, thereby indirectly influencing government decisions.

While direct corporate donations to political parties and candidates are often easy to trace, corporate funding can also be re-channelled through supposedly independent organisations, via non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and “think tanks”.

The alcohol and tobacco industries fund not-for-profit organisations to conduct social campaigns or engage in research. They are often presented as “independent”, despite their industry connections. An Australian study found the alcohol industry used these organisations to promote ineffective responses in policy submissions and to campaign against higher alcohol taxes.

The “revolving door” phenomenon, where industry personnel enter policy making and vice versa, is another influence pathway. One recent example from the tobacco sector involves an ex-senior official from the World Health Organisation moving to a leadership role in a non-profit funded by one of the biggest tobacco producers in the world.

In New Zealand, investigative reporting has highlighted the easy movement between lobbying roles for the alcohol industry and subsequent senior public policy roles.

What can be done?

Key proposals for the long-term regulation of lobbying in New Zealand have focused on establishing a lobbying register and introducing a cooling off period for former ministers before they can enter the lobbying sector.

This is a good start to providing transparency.

According to a 2022 review of lobbying regulations by the OECD, the register needs to be enforceable, and provide enough detail about lobbying activities, to be effective. This includes who is conducting lobbying, their key objectives and targeted politicians.

In New Zealand, the opposition suggested a 12 month stand-down period for former ministers before they can enter lobbying. In Canada, the cooling-off period for designated public officials is five years.

And – as we showed with examples above – there are other political roles beyond ministers that need to be considered, including MPs and local government officials. The hiring of former private corporate employees into the public sector should also be looked at.

Defining who should be covered by the transparency requirements is another challenge. A range of actors beyond professional lobbyists compete for policymakers’ attention.

These include think-tanks, NGOs and even researchers who may receive funding from corporations. The OECD review found those third-party actors are not always covered by transparency requirements and some activities, such as the use of social media as a lobbying tool, are exempt.

Corporations may have legitimate demands to protect market-sensitive information. Yet modern lobbying regulations need to ensure citizens can access key information on all forms of lobbying, including on social media.The Conversation


*Marta Rychert, Senior Researcher in Drug Policy, Massey University and Chris Wilkins, Associate Professor and leader of drug research team, Massey University. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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30 Comments

If we were to put personal information aside, I think pretty much every meeting/discussion within the government bounds (including non-elected) should be recorded and available for public dissemination immediately.

Closed doors don't belong in a democratic context.

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Local government too.

They seem pretty flippant reasons sometimes as to why they have closed to the public meetings.

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Could this be why Chloe Swarbricks very sensible alcohol harm reduction bill failed? Would be interesting to know what gifts the MPs voting against had received. I enjoy the odd IPA but can still see the massive harm alcohol causes in NZ. It has no place in sport’s advertising.

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Does alcohol in sports advertising result in increased alcohol harm?  Or will this alcohol harm still exist regardless?

Take away alcohol advertising in sports = take away a good amount of funding with no change to social harm.   

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Would alcohol companies be sponsoring sport if it didn't increase alcohol consumption? 

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Exactly, and I think you're dead right WH. Guyon Espiner has done a good exposé on the alcohol industry, plus a recent one on lobbying in government. The two compliment each other quite nicely, and are well worth checking out. Then we have our new Chief of Staff Andrew Kirton fresh out of a corporate role lobbying for, among others, the liquor industry. The result of all this is completely sensible ideas like Swarbrick's alcohol harm reduction bill being inexplicably shot down in parliament, despite the incredible amount of harm we know it causes.

I guess Kieran McAnulty was right: we don't do democracy anymore.

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Would alcohol companies be sponsoring sport if it didn't increase alcohol consumption? 

Sponsorship is not necessarily about 'increasing consumption' of a product or a brand. For example, you drink beer. You drink some trendy craft beer but you switch to buying Tui because it's cheaper and you decide that the taste is acceptable. That doesn't necessarily mean more beer is consumed. It means that you spend your dollar on a different brand. 

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This was the same argument people gave for vape ads: "it's not encouraging people to start vaping, only to stop smoking!".

We all know how much truth there was in that now.

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Correlation =/= causation.  Is it the ads that encourage people to vape, or when one kid walks around blowing fruity formaldehyde clouds every other kid wants to do the same?  

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There's no reason it has to be one or the other. Pretty hard to argue that the ads aren't a contributing factor.

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Vapers sit in 2 camps. The first is haggard looking washed up ex-smokers trying to find a mechanism to quit. The second is younger people who have never smoked and think vaping is cool and hip. Nothing makes you look more like a dork than vaping. Sadly, most users of douche-nozzles are young. This is the market the suppliers want to grow and exploit.

Never smoked. Run as if your life depends on it. Or swim, bike, row....

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Schools are full of vapes. Most Vape shops target young people. A new generation are now hooked on nicotine.The government could easily legislate against vapes by making them prescription only, limiting to two flavours or reducing/banning nicotine in vapes. However there seems to be a strong pro-vape lobby, this seems to include ASH who almost promote Vaping and play down concerns around young people. Who funds ASH?

Vaping and Harm Reduction - ASH NZ

 

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Look what government has done to tobacco.  Cartoons of cigarettes are burglars go to source of funds.  Leave government out of personal choices.  If people want to Vape, then Vape.  If people want to smoke or drink, then smoke and drink.  There is more damage to people's health from sugar and vaccines, but it seems they are mandatory.

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Sponsorship is not about increasing consumption of a product or a brand .... ... it means you spend your dollar on a different brand. (ergo, you've increased consumption of the [presumably advertised] different brand).

You've contradicted yourself, well done.

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Naive in the extreme!

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They're advertising for brand awareness and increased market share.

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Speaking of conflicts of interest: Meng Foon

http://norightturn.blogspot.com/2023/04/completely-inappropriate.html?m…

The IoD considers that perceptions are as important as declarations.

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Wow. And then to stand there and say there is nothing to see here...

They both need to be shown the door for sheer incompetence alone.

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Speaking of conflicts of interest (2)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chris_Bishop_(politician)

Bishop spent a year working as a researcher for the National Party. Then, after the 2008 general election, he worked as a ministerial advisor for Gerry Brownlee for several years. Then he worked as a lobbyist for the tobacco company Philip Morris and as a staffer to Steven Joyce[7] Bishop is a former tobacco lobbyist for Phillip Morris. [8][9]

Bishop's work for Philip Morris attracted headlines and comments when he stood for parliament for the National Party, given he worked against the party's plans to increase tobacco excise and introduce plain packaging. On the day of his selection as a candidate he announced that he supported both policies.[10]

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"...you could use him as a corkscrew"

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I thought that we elected people to parliament to look after ours, the voters of NZ interests.  I.E. they are there to serve us, not lobbyists, foreign, business or their own interests.  Accordingly I think that in any exchanges with anybody other than us the voters, their only justified position is to look after our interests.  Clearly this is not happening and we have external parties with no justified rights lobbying in their own interests and against ours, the voters.  Our politicians are complicit in this.  

Accordingly apart from all the other measures being promoted, I believe that all communication between any party other than voters, in relation to their personal issues, should only via written media, and all related correspondence must be published so that we can all see what our servants, the MPs are up to.  Any other contact should not be allowed because it is just far too easy for non voters to butter up, softly bribe and otherwise steer our MPs in the direction that suits them against our interests. 

In a word our, political system is deeply corrupt and badly needs a complete reset.

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Jacinda Ardern - 'We will be a party that governs for every New Zealander'

https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/political/428596/election-2020-jacinda-arder…

Yeah, right. How did that work out  ?

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+1

Government by the people, for the people.

Its not meant to be just for those with money or power.

 

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Lobbying is probably well over 2000  years old. You ain't going to stop it in any form, regulation or no regulation.

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The lobbying lobby has entered the chat..

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There's a much more imminent threat to democracy in this country, and that's the public interest journalism fund.

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And for such a small investment too, compared to the rest of the Governments media budget that conspiracy enthusiasts completely ignore.

There has to be someone pushing these ideas for them to get so popular.

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"...compared to the rest of the Governments..."  Almost sounds like you're saying the MSM is just another government department.  Anyway, what's the saying "He who pays the piper calls the tune".  

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In todays globalised world, you can put 100 million into a Swiss account, or any account in a tax haven and hand over access to anyone you think will provide you with a return on that money. And that could be billions.

I find i hard to believe that some of the decisions politicians make comes down to a few sausage rolls or a 10,000 donation.

The corruption index is based on perception, nothing to do with reality.

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Serious question: what part of New Zealand doesn't operate on some kind of cosy, unofficial arrangement?

To paraphrase a Canadian auditor working here: New Zealand isn't necessarily less corrupt than other some places, it's just that Kiwis are spectacularly crap at noticing it.

 

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