Studyspark Study Document

Interest Groups and Lobbyists It Term Paper

Pages:3 (1003 words)

Sources:1+

Subject:Government

Topic:Interest Groups

Document Type:Term Paper

Document:#86381271


The top of the group would be contract lobbyists who have the most information about a particular part of the political process and have close connections with policymakers in that area. They are the most threatening of all the lobbyists because of their sheer influence. They are hired by specific interest groups to further their interests. They are sought for their knowledge in their own interest area. For example education lobbyists are highly sought after for their power and influence in the field of education budget and reforms. They can easily find support for their interests and objectives in every local community. (Rosenthal, 1998, pp.208-209)

Government lobbyists on the other hand are regular federal or state employees connected with some specific agency and their job is to present their concerns and the concerns of their agency in the legislature. One of the primary ways that lobbyists and interest groups can indicate the level of interest is an issue is congressional testimony. Once an interest group has a representative in the Congress, that person can take part in the congressional testimony and speak on any issue of interest. The level of intensity with which it is debated also indicates public's interest in the topic. These testimonies can also act as a catalyst in generating interest as some believe that interest in an issue normally picks up intensity after a testimony and not before it. (Leech et al. 2005)

This shows that we do need interest groups and lobbyists to understand some major problems and issues affecting the economy, society or the public in general. It can also lead to unnecessary interest or debate but it definitely shows that public can receive sound information and receive education about important policy issues through lobbyists and interest groups.

As long as lobbyists are working within the framework of accepted political process, there is nothing wrong with their existence. They serve a specific purpose. They help interest groups and public opinion to find their voice in the legislature. However it is the underhand tactics they sometimes use that have given lobbyists a bad name and hence they are seen as an unwanted element in the system. The same is true for interest groups who were both given protection by the constitution because a) they had a different purpose then and b) they do help in educating the public, supporting some political campaigns and providing important information to policy makers.

References

Thomas, Clive S., and Ronald L. Hrebenar. 2004. "Interest Groups in the States." in

Politics in the American States, 8th ed. ed. Virginia Gray and Russell L. Hanson.

Washington DC: CQ Press.

Rosenthal, Alan. 1998. The Decline of Representative Democracy. Washington, DC: CQ

Press

Leech, Beth L., Frank R. Baumgartner, Timothy La Pira, and Nicholas a. Semanko. 2005. Drawing Lobbyists to Washington: Government Activity and Interest-Group Mobilization. Political Research Quarterly 58, 1 (March): 19 -- 30.

John M. de Figueiredo, the Timing, Intensity, and Composition of Interest Group Lobbying: An…


Sample Source(s) Used

References

Thomas, Clive S., and Ronald L. Hrebenar. 2004. "Interest Groups in the States." in

Politics in the American States, 8th ed. ed. Virginia Gray and Russell L. Hanson.

Washington DC: CQ Press.

Rosenthal, Alan. 1998. The Decline of Representative Democracy. Washington, DC: CQ

Cite this Document

Join thousands of other students and "spark your studies."

Sign Up for FREE
Related Documents

Studyspark Study Document

Interest Groups Seek Influence Public Policy Interest

Pages: 6 (1970 words) Sources: 7 Subject: Government Document: #69704670

Interest Groups Seek Influence Public Policy Interest Groups Seek Influence Making Public Policy Define an interest group, with examples An interest group can be described as an association that is formally organized that is in pursuit of influencing public policy. The wider description, scholars using it increasingly, older contrasts with it, narrower ones, which are inclusive of private associations only that their formal organization is distinct like Italy's General Confederation of industry and

Studyspark Study Document

Interest Groups a Force to Reckon With

Pages: 7 (2168 words) Sources: 6 Subject: Government Document: #38908186

Interest Groups A FORCE TO RECKON WITH Special Interest Groups An interest group, or a special interest group, is a group of concerned individuals who share common goals (JB-HDNP, 2012). They connect the public to lawmakers and vice versa. They try to sway public opinion, election, and public policy (JB-HDNP). Special interest groups make strong demands on the government (Magleby et al., 2010). These groups may be economic or occupational, ideological, public interest,

Studyspark Study Document

Interest Groups

Pages: 5 (1506 words) Sources: 5 Subject: Government Document: #13053372

Interest Groups Describe the different types of interest groups (single issue groups and public interest groups) and the goals that each type pursues. Single-issue interest groups are exactly that: groups concerned with one issue, and one issue only. Although the single interest might overlap with broader issues or related interests, the main goal of a single-interest group is to promote legislation related to the target area. For example, the National Rifle Association

Studyspark Study Document

Interest Groups

Pages: 2 (653 words) Sources: 2 Subject: Government Document: #62328264

Interest groups are organizations of people with similar policy goals who intend to influence a process to achieve their policy goals. Interest groups have been their since time immemorial with some being as old as the independent United States. Interest groups normally persuade elected representatives to share their point-of-view especially in democracies. In fact, they are a necessary requirement for democracies. A more universal definition of interest groups is a

Studyspark Study Document

Interest Groups 'Special' Interest Group

Pages: 2 (854 words) Sources: 1+ Subject: Government Document: #65844933

One of Common Cause's most passionate and popular causes is campaign finance reform. Common Cause practices what it preaches -- it is almost entirely funded by the often small, individual donations of its members. It is proud that one of the bills it has been promoting for many years was finally passed with substantial bipartisan support, the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002, "the most significant campaign reform bill in

Studyspark Study Document

Interest Groups Catholics for Choice

Pages: 1 (474 words) Subject: Women's Issues - Sexuality Document: #66781687

While this group does ask for donations through a donation button, donations are not emphasized and nothing is stated about a reward for donating. Located in Alexandria, Virginia, the group is very close to Washington, D.C., although they also state they have been active in Minneapolis. Feminists for Life (http://www.feministsforlife.org/) The premise of this organization is that members do not believe women should be forced to choose between their goals and

Join thousands of other students and

"spark your studies".