The Conservative Member of Parliament as Lobbyist for Constituency Economic Interests
- 1 September 1987
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Political Studies
- Vol. 35 (3) , 393-409
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9248.1987.tb00196.x
Abstract
Interviews undertaken in the House of Commons with 70 backbench Conservative MPs in 1983–84 examined the extent to which they pursue their own localized industrial policy strategies as part of their efforts to maintain constituency electoral support. This involves lobbying efforts directed toward ministers in support of local industries, either in defence of jobs, in promotion of new jobs, or in a variety of quests for government benefits or relaxation of restrictions. It was found that 36 of the 70 Conservative MPs could be classified as ‘constituency lobbyists’, reflecting interview evidence that they consider lobbying on behalf of local industries to be a normal and important part of their representative rôle as MPs. The hypothesis that vulnerable constituencies—vulnerable in both political and economic terms—would be represented by constituency lobbyists was tested through the construction of an index of constituency ‘security’. It was found that the more secure the constituency, the less likely is the MP to lobby on behalf of local industrial interests.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Role of the Good Constituency Member and the Practice of Representation in Great BritainThe Journal of Politics, 1985
- The Constituency Service Basis of the Personal Vote for U.S. Representatives and British Members of ParliamentAmerican Political Science Review, 1984
- Regional Partisanship and the Legitimacy of British Governments 1868-1983Parliamentary Affairs, 1984
- The Constituency ComponentComparative Political Studies, 1983
- Blessed Be the Tie That Unbinds: Constituency Work and the Vote Swing in Great BritainPolitical Studies, 1983
- Electoral Choice and the Production of Government: The Changing Operation of the Electoral System in the United Kingdom since 1955British Journal of Political Science, 1982
- Rules of the Game in Britain: Can the Politicians Be Trusted?American Political Science Review, 1982
- The House Is Not a Home: British MPs in Their ConstituenciesLegislative Studies Quarterly, 1979
- The Member of Parliament as Representative: The View from the ConstituencyPolitical Studies, 1977
- The M.P. and His SurgeryPolitical Studies, 1963