David Miller, William Dinan & Philip Schlesinger, 2 September 2001
Article originally appeared in the Sunday Herald and can be accessed at David Miller's Website
Lobbying debate
Contrary to Mr. Ian Coldwell of the Institute of Public Relations, registering lobbyists does not interfere with the right to receive and impart information enshrined in the European Convention on Human Rights (Letters, 26 August).
It simply requires vested interests to disclose how much money
they are paying to influence the decisions of MSPs, and for what purpose.
This will not in any way stop vested interests from communicating, but it
will afford a sceptical public some knowledge about an otherwise opaque world
whose activities affect us all. In fact, we actually
agree with the IPR that it would be unfair just to regulate
commercial lobbying consultants and to leave completely unregistered those
working in-house for large corporations. We have repeatedly said so in our
evidence to the Committee.
The lobbying and PR industries (the IPR included) are currently
engaged in a concerted campaign to deflect the Standards Committee from taking
an important step in the direction of openness and accountability in line
with the high aspirations once held for the Scottish Parliament. It is important
for the public interest that the committee stick to its guns. |