Home Politics Calls Grow for Integrity Commission to Investigate Lobbying

Calls Grow for Integrity Commission to Investigate Lobbying

by Harry Murphy

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Resistance from within the major parties is substantial but not uniform. Some backbench MPs have broken ranks, publicly stating that the current rules create a culture in which influence is traded close to the line of legality and that the public has a right to know who is shaping the laws they live under. One former minister, now retired from politics, gave an unusually candid interview acknowledging that the access afforded to corporate lobbyists during their time in parliament was disproportionate and corrosive. Such admissions, while rare, add weight to the argument that internal voices for reform exist and that the issue is not purely a partisan wedge.

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The business community’s response has been mixed. Peak bodies including the Business Council of Australia have stated their support for strong, transparent governance frameworks and have acknowledged that public trust in institutions is essential for a stable investment environment. At the same time, individual corporations and industry associations have quietly lobbied against any changes that would restrict their ability to provide timely, expert input into policy development. The distinction between legitimate advocacy and undue influence is, in practice, difficult to police, and the debate ultimately turns on where to draw lines that protect democratic integrity without stifling the flow of information that governments need to make informed decisions.

As the parliamentary inquiry process grinds on, public sentiment is hardening. Opinion polling indicates that a clear majority of Australians believe the political system serves the interests of the powerful rather than ordinary people, a finding that has remained stubbornly stable across recent elections. The lobbying debate, for all its procedural complexity, is fundamentally about this perception of fairness. Advocates for a stronger integrity commission argue that sunlight is the most effective disinfectant and that the current dimness around lobbying erodes the social contract at its foundations. The question now is whether the political class can summon the will to turn the lamps up, even if doing so shines an uncomfortable light on its own practices.

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