Premium Only Content

What is LOBBYING?
✪✪✪✪✪
http://www.theaudiopedia.com
✪✪✪✪✪
What does LOBBYING mean? LOBBYING meaning - LOBBYING definition - LOBBYING explanation. What is the meaning of LOBBYING? What is the definition of LOBBYING? What does LOBBYING stand for? What is LOBBYING meaning? What is LOBBYING definition?
Lobbying (also lobby) is the act of attempting to influence decisions made by officials in a government, most often legislators or members of regulatory agencies. Lobbying is done by many types of people, associations and organized groups, including individuals in the private sector, corporations, fellow legislators or government officials, or advocacy groups (interest groups). Lobbyists may be among a legislator's constituencies, meaning a voter or block of voters within his or her electoral district, or not; they may engage in lobbying as a business, or not. Professional lobbyists are people whose business is trying to influence legislation on behalf of a group or individual who hires them. Individuals and nonprofit organizations can also lobby as an act of volunteering or as a small part of their normal job (for instance, a CEO meeting with a representative about a project important to his/her company, or an activist meeting with his/her legislator in an unpaid capacity). Governments often define and regulate organized group lobbying that has become influential.
The ethics and morality of lobbying are dual-edged. Lobbying is often spoken of with contempt, when the implication is that people with inordinate socioeconomic power are corrupting the law (twisting it away from fairness) in order to serve their own interests. When people who have a duty to act on behalf of others, such as elected officials with a duty to serve their constituents' interests or more broadly the public good, can benefit by shaping the law to serve the interests of some private parties a conflict of interest exists. Many critiques of lobbying point to the potential for conflicts of interest to lead to agent misdirection or the intentional failure of an agent with a duty to serve an employer, client, or constituent to perform those duties. The failure of government officials to serve the public interest as a consequence of lobbying by special interests who provide benefits to the official is an example of agent misdirection.
In contrast, another side of lobbying is making sure that others' interests are duly defended against others' corruption, or even simply making sure that minority interests are fairly defended against mere tyranny of the majority. For example, a medical association may lobby a legislature about increasing the restrictions in smoking prevention laws, and tobacco companies lobby to reduce them: the first regarding smoking as injurious to health and the second arguing it is part of the freedom of choice
-
1:41
The Audiopedia
1 year agoWhat is PUBLIC DEBT?
53 -
Dear America
33 minutes agoThis is REVIVAL!! 100k+ Show Up For Charlies Vigil!! Whole Place Broke into Worship!!
-
UPCOMING
Matt Kohrs
8 hours agoStock Market Open: The Week Ahead || Live Trading Futures & Options
9051 -
LIVE
Chicks On The Right
3 hours agoCharlie's Memorial: highlights, the lead-up, the crowds, and the speech that broke the internet.
7,745 watching -
LIVE
LFA TV
12 hours agoLFA TV ALL DAY STREAM ! | MONDAY 9/22/25
6,975 watching -
1:09:12
JULIE GREEN MINISTRIES
2 hours agoLIVE WITH JULIE
38.4K104 -
LIVE
The Bubba Army
2 days ago90K Honor Charlie Kirk At Memorial - Bubba the Love Sponge® Show | 9/22/25
3,110 watching -
38:21
Stephen Gardner
2 days ago🔥Is Kash Patel HIDING DETAILS About Charlie Kirk & Jeffrey Epstein? Judge Joe Brown
75.9K195 -
26:33
DeVory Darkins
1 day ago $60.77 earnedRep Omar EMBARRASSES herself in a painful way as Newsom PANICS over Kamala confrontation
108K332 -
3:28:14
Badlands Media
1 day agoThe Narrative Ep. 39: The Sovereign Mind
133K39