Lobbying is the least of it: corporate interests have captured the entire democratic process. No wonder so many have given up on politics
  
It's the reason for the collapse of democratic choice. It's the 
source of our growing disillusionment with politics. It's the great 
unmentionable. Corporate power. The media will scarcely whisper its 
name. It is howlingly absent from parliamentary debates. Until we name 
it and confront it, politics is a waste of time.
The political 
role of business corporations is generally interpreted as that of 
lobbyists, seeking to influence government policy. In reality they 
belong on the inside. They are part of the nexus of power that creates 
policy. They face no significant resistance, from either government or 
opposition, as their interests have now been woven into the fabric of 
all three main political parties in Britain.
On Monday, for instance, the Guardian revealed that the government's subsidy system for gas-burning power stations is being designed by an executive from the Dublin-based company ESB International, who has been seconded into the Department of Energy. What does ESB do? Oh, it builds gas-burning power stations.
On the same day we learned that a government minister, Nick Boles, has privately assured the gambling company Ladbrokes
 that it needn't worry about attempts by local authorities to stop the 
spread of betting shops. His new law will prevent councils from taking 
action.
Last week we discovered that G4S's contract to run immigration removal centres will be expanded, even though all further business with the state was supposed to be frozen while allegations of fraud were investigated.
Now opposition MPs stare mutely as their powers are given away to a 
system of offshore arbitration panels run by corporate lawyers.
Since
 Blair, parliament operates much as Congress in the United States does: 
the lefthand glove puppet argues with the righthand glove puppet, but 
neither side will turn around to face the corporate capital that 
controls almost all our politics.
This is why the assertion that 
parliamentary democracy has been reduced to a self-important farce has 
resonated so widely over the past fortnight.
So I don't blame 
people for giving up on politics. I haven't given up yet, but I find it 
ever harder to explain why.
When a state-corporate nexus of power has 
bypassed democracy and made a mockery of the voting process, when an 
unreformed political funding system ensures that parties can be bought 
and sold, when politicians of the three main parties stand and watch as 
public services are divvied up by a grubby cabal of privateers, what is 
left of this system that inspires us to participate?

No comments:
Post a Comment