At the time this article was published
Joseph A. Gatner was a member of the Political and Social Affairs Division of
the Research Branch of the Library of Parliament.
Pressure groups are a growing phenomenon in
modern pluralistic society. Their detractors claim that as political elites
they undermine the democratic process. Members of Parliament have traditionally
welcomed the presence of pressure groups as sources of information on
particular issues and problems. This article raises a number of questions
related to pressure groups in Canada.
Organized pressure or interest groups and
the development of lobbying probably first began some three centuries ago when
businessmen sought special privileges from Members of the British Parliament in
the outer lobbies of Westminster. Some authorities maintain that lobbying,
which stems from the right to petition government, goes back to the Magna Carta
of June 1215. Today lobbying agents of particular pressure groups are employed
by organizations of every kind and description. They range from corporations,
trade associations and labour unions to religious and ethnic groupings. While
their activities are found at all levels of government and are directed at the
different arms of government as well, their most important area of operation in
Canada is directed at the executive arm at the federal level where their impact
has been the most profound.
Pressure or interest groups have been
varyingly defined. A comprehensive description was made by Robert Presthus in
1973 after an extensive study carried out under a Canada Council grant. He
described interest groups as collectivities organized around explicit values on
behalf of which essentially political claims are made vis-à-vis governments as
well as other groups and the general public. These interest groups, according
to Presthus, are also endowed with such characteristics as membership,
organization, and an official raison d'être or collective mission, with such
associated sub-goals as the establishment of security, prestige, and income for
a permanent staff. Such groups seek to satisfy their claims through the
practical political process involving negotiation and consultation with power
structures in both the public and private sectors of society.
Unfortunately the majority of Canadian
citizens have little knowledge of pressure groups or their lobbying agents'
functions. As a result, when a lobbyist is associated in the press with some
interest group he is often immediately regarded with suspicion.
In an effort to establish their legitimacy
pressure groups often go beyond the mere articulation of the demands of their
members. In such instances the organizational goals of the leadership are
considered the more important of their activities. Some of the most important
organizational goals of interest groups are the preservation and the continued
growth of their organizations as well as the continuation of their leaders in
respective positions of leadership. Research has indicated that the Canadian Labour
Congress, for instance, has sought to establish the role of its leaders, and
that of itself as an institution, as the primary spokesmen for the trade union
movement in Canada in the minds of both its members and the government as well
as with the public.
Leaders of such interest groups develop
close links with existing political and social structures as a means of
ensuring the protection of their interests and of maintaining their access to
governments. Such links are often developed through participation in joint
ventures with other interest groups in the pursuit of specific mutual political
objectives. This activity enhances their leadership mandate and reinforces the
status of the interest body representing the specific segment of society. David
Kwavnick pointed out in his study, Organized Labour and Pressure Groups, the
Canadian Labour Congress 195658, that relations between the Canadian Labour
Congress and Canadian political leaders clearly demonstrate that the principal
officers of the former, particularly its president, have access to any member
of the cabinet, including the Prime Minister, at almost any time for the
discussion of virtually any aspect of government policy.
Hearings before parliamentary committees,
either in the House or the Senate, provide other opportunities for the pressure
group leaders to affirm their mandate. As a consequence it is not surprising to
find that pressure groups, whenever possible, seek to ensure that parliamentary
hearings are held on bills which pertain to their interest.
Types of Pressure Groups
A rather intriguing finding in some studies
has been that interest groups are not profit oriented, although many are
creatures of bodies which in themselves are in the business of profit-making. Among
the more notable of such interest groups are the Chambers of Commerce and the
Boards of Trade. Indeed, the larger share of pressure group activity in Canada
has traditionally represented the economic interests of agriculture, labour,
and business and industry.
In the sector where economic gain is of
lesser importance or is shared with other competing interests, one finds such
professional groups as the Canadian Association of University Teachers, the
Canadian Bar Association, and the Canadian Medical Association. The
communication sector is represented by such bodies as the Canadian Association
of Broadcasters, the Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers Association, and many
others. Well-known bodies in the field of public administration include the Canadian
Association of Chiefs of Police and the Canadian Federation of Mayors and
Municipalities. Another category consists of the increasing number of ethnic
groups and related religious interest groups. An important and growing group
area today consists of women's organization Social action and Ideological
groups include such bodies as the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, the
Canadian Council of Christians and Jews and such militant groups as the
Consumers Association of Canada.
The activity of pressure groups in Canada is
related to the evolution of problems and the changing priorities of our
society. Ecological concern of the 1960s spawned a large number of
environmental protection groups Since the end of World War II Canada's concern
with the feeding and development of the Third World has precipitated the
proliferation of interest groups co-operating with the Canadian government to
dispense development to the Third World. The Canadian Council for International
Co-operation is the umbrella organization for some ninety Canadian
nongovernmental organizations concerned with Third World development. The
emergence of Canada's native people in the last two decades has resulted in the
birth of another segment of Canadian interest group activity. These groups represent
Canada's three native people, i.e. the Indian, the Inuit, and the Metis and
non-status Indians.
The obvious conclusion from the
proliferation of interest groups in Canada since the end of World War II is
that as society becomes more complex and governments become more involved,
increasing group pressures are generated and ultimately find themselves
operating in the political arena.
Organization
A significant aspect of pressure group
organization in Canada is their local or national peculiarities. They are
organized on a federated basis when interests which concern them come under
both federal and provincial jurisdictions. On the other hand, the federation
principle is less adhered to by those groups whose interests come under
national rather than provincial jurisdiction. Among the best examples of the
non-federated type organization is the Canadian Bankers Association. The
federation principle of organization exists in such influential bodies as the
Canadian Chambers of Commerce and the Canadian Manufacturers Association, which
tends to facilitate access to the federal government. Such organization,
however, does not automatically breed success. For instance, officials of the
Canadian Medical Association have conceded that their greatest achievements have
come through their provincial organizations. R.A. Weir, in surveying the
operations of the Canadian Medical Association in 1973, explained that the
raison a"d'être underlying this phenomenon was related to the fact that
Canadian federalism has required decentralization of the health policymaking
process between federal and provincial levels of government. Thus when groups
hope to influence national health insurance policy they normally approach the
provincial governments as the primary point of access to the decision-making
process.
Today the increasing complexity and
interdependence of different Canadian interests has added yet another dimension
to the politics of Canadian pressure groups. In the grain industry for
instance, the Canadian Grains Council was formed in the late 1960s to
co-ordinate the interests of some twenty-six diverse organizations, including
the Canadian Federation of Agriculture, the Dominion Marine Association, the
Canadian Railways, the United Grain Growers and the Saskatchewan Association of
Rural Municipalities. The formation of the Council as the national
co-ordinating body ensured that the grain industry could speak to the federal
government in unison and with a force greater than was previously possible.
The grain industry is but one example of
similarly organized lobbying or interest group arrangements in other areas. The
engineering profession, the manufacturing and commercial associations as well
as the bar and medical professions all strive to co-ordinate their mutual
interests in order to produce the most telling effect possible as well as avoid
open differences of opinion which might militate against their objectives.
Most financing of Canadian interest groups
is carried out through the levying of membership dues set in various ways,
depending upon the nature of the group involved. In a large number of cases
involving trade associations a graduated fee is set according to the size or
volume of business of the firm. For a smaller number Professor Presthus found
that financing was obtained from both the contribution of individual and
company memberships. In addition to these basic methods of obtaining revenue
other income is derived through a variety of means. Some associations offer
seminars which bring in substantial revenue; others receive federal, provincial
or local grants of various kinds; some produce and sell research studies, and
others obtain revenue from the sale of advertising in their journals. Annual
conventions, at which space may be sold to commercial enterprises, provide
another common source of income. Some interest groups, although this is less
frequent, receive substantial annual amounts of money from affiliated
associations or from other related interest groups.
Functions, Operations and Tactics
It may be argued that a pressure group often
parallels or approximates, perhaps even competes with the role of the
legislator. At its best, the pressure group helps to provide information to the
executive and legislative arms of government. As a representative of a certain
interest, the pressure group often serves as an interpreter of the political
climate to government. In this respect it conveys the feelings of the interest
involved to the bureaucracy and the legislator and most specifically to the
pinnacle of power, the cabinet.
While pressure groups in Canada are
purported to have less opportunity of influencing political decisions than
their counterparts in the United States their activity is probably not that
dissimilar. In Canada the primary role and function of pressure groups is to
articulate political demands and seek support for them among other groups by
advocacy and bargaining. Once this is accomplished they attempt to transform
such demands into authoritative public policy by influencing the choices of
political personnel and the various processes of public policy-making,
including its implementation.
Organized pressure and interest groups
mostly exert their pressure by means of the professional lobbyist. Professional
lobbyists are usually experts who help interested parties, particularly
businessmen, to understand the government procedures and regulations which
affect them. They also provide advice on the best course of action permissible
under existing regulatory and political circumstances. Much of the work of such
lobbyists usually consists of keeping clients informed of the activities in
government departments so they can be technically prepared for certain
consequences that might ultimately transpire from a new piece of legislation or
government decision.
Generally, Canada's principal interest
groups maintain close liaison, by means of informal discussion, personal letter
or formal brief, with that part of the Ottawa establishment, or the parallel
provincial establishments, that affect them most directly. In the case of the
Canadian Labour Congress that would be the Department of Labour, for the
Canadian Federation of Agriculture, the Department of Agriculture or the
Canadian Wheat Board, with regard to the Canadian Manufacturers Association,
the Departments of Industry, Trade and Commerce, Finance and Labour. The
Consumers Association of Canada, whose interest spreads over many departments
at one time, is known to maintain relations of mutual thrust and friendship
with officials in several different departments. This practice of course is
repeated at the provincial level, usually on a smaller scale.
Pressure groups attempt to influence royal
commissions or task forces by submitting briefs during the hearings but they
also have been known to make efforts to obtain the appointment of their
representatives, or people whose leanings are in their favor, to the enquiry
itself. Occasionally, interest groups manage to have their representatives
appointed to government boards that have advisory or regulatory power over their
interests. The need for pressure group as a vehicle to obtain access to
government is also prompted by the rather high degree of diffidence individual
citizens show towards personally approaching officials at any level of
government. Analogous to this is the generally higher interaction that labour
representative groups have with backbenchers while industrial pressure groups
tend to gain access at the cabinet level, a fact that is undoubtedly related to
their somewhat similar social homogeneity. Furthermore, pressure groups
possessing generous shares of recognized legitimacy and related political
connections tend to function quietly within the system. Groups possessing fewer
such resources often operate on its periphery and tend to employ more provocative
and publicly oriented stratagems such as mass campaigns on Parliament Hill.
While a good deal of lobbying goes on behind
the scenes there is quite a bit of traditional pressuring that is open to
public view. The most traditional and best known representation of this type is
the annual submission to the federal cabinet. These annual submissions cover
all the areas of interest of the group making the submission. As already noted,
sometimes such representation is made both before the government as well as a
parliamentary committee.
Not all briefs made to government and
parliamentary committees carry the same weight. While the government normally
places a good deal of important on briefs, the degree to which each submission
will influence policy depends on a number of factors. Among these are: the
importance of the group making the presentation; the tone of the brief; the
submission's concern with the public good; the validity and accuracy of the
claims made; and the recognition of opposing interests.
Interest Groups and Members of Parliament
While a major share of the lobbying by
pressure groups is directed at the cabinet, interest groups have also become
more aware of Members of Parliament in recent years. One explanation for this
current phenomenon is the growing importance of parliamentary committees.
However there is also the general realization that Members of Parliament are
potential cabinet ministers and contact with them should not be neglected in
the early stages of their parliamentary careers. Furthermore, the nature of the
matter is also important in determining where the pressure of the lobby should
be placed. In such matters as amendments to the criminal code, like capital
punishment or abortion and especially when free votes are permitted in Parliament,
lobbying groups increasingly direct the thrust of their efforts towards the
individual Member. If a matter has local consequences that are repeated
throughout the country, such as the lobbying for the exemption of local soft
drink franchises from the requirements of the Combines Investigation Act in
1975 by the Canadian Soft Drink Bottlers' Association, Members of Parliament
collectively are also liable to pressure from interest groups.
Interestingly, the reaction of some Members
of Parliament is that pressure groups often mistakenly believe that if they can
persuade a sufficient number of backbench Members of Parliament to support a
given policy they might, through the latters' efforts in caucus, be able to
change the mind of the relevant minister and hence the policy of the
government. Generally, Members of Parliament tend to find useful the practice
of establishing contacts with group representatives in order to obtain
information about technical aspects of certain legislation. Moreover, a Member of
Parliament likes to make such contacts because the interests concerned happen
to coincide with those of his constituents. Ideological identification between
Members and particular groups on certain policy matters also attract lobbyists.
Members of Parliament of course must obtain information on both the operational
consequences of government policy as well as on the reactions to its
implementation from their own constituencies. Furthermore, Presthus' survey
carried out in the early part of this decade showed that provincial legislators
were even more prone to being approached by lobbyists representing interest
groups than their federal counterparts in Ottawa. The general contention is
that the lobbying of legislators does in the end produce positive results for
pressure groups. Whether such practices serve the general welfare is still a
matter of public discussion and should continue to be examined closely.
Organized interest groups represent
concentration of power. One of the major criticisms directed against them is
that their ability to mobilize large individual units of power and thus exert a
greater impact, gives them tremendous advantage over unorganized groups.
Charges have also been made that interest groups are often not democratically
organized, with the rank and file having little to do with the selection of
officers and leaders and even less with policymaking. Furthermore, critics
point to the alleged fact that such groups too often put their own interest
above that of the public. A further charge is directed at the techniques used
by groups, which in the past have included such questionable practices as
bribing, deceiving, cheating and falsifying of information in order to obtain
their objectives. It is understandable then why it is sometimes held that they
tend to do more harm than good and divide and confuse people with slanted
propaganda. In the eyes of their detractors such criticisms amount to a
powerful indictment of pressure groups and their value to society.
Parliamentary registration of lobbying
agents has been suggested for some time. It was advocated in Canada when the
then Minister for Consumers and Corporate Affairs, the Honourable Ron Basford,
indicated in 1969 that his department was on the verge of introducing
legislation to bring about the registration of' lobbyists and interest groups.
This never transpired but the importance of pressure groups and the activities
of their agents undoubtedly warrants the establishment of means to identify
them. Democratic and parliamentary institutions are primarily designed to serve
the public interest and the presence of anonymous agents placing pressures on
legislators, the executive and at the implementation levels of the public
interest should undoubtedly require some public identification. Indeed, the
absence of their public visibility might, in the long run, undermine not only
the parliamentary and democratic process but also the public's confidence in
these institutions. The secrecy surrounding non elected and anonymous agents of
particular interests has undoubtedly already contributed to the erosion of the
credibility of the country's public institutions. The need for the regulation
of "interest group agents" probably has never been greater. Such
registration might be considered part of an emerging code of ethics that is
required of all people dealing with the public's affairs.