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Comment by shkkmo

2 years ago

Advertising is PR, not lobbying.

Lobbying often involves implicit or explicit offers of campaign funding, PAC support/opposition, and gifts that skirt the edge of what is legally bribery.

No, lobbying is “attempting to influence the government”. Advertising about proposed bills is 100% lobbying.

Without any funding to the politician involved, a lobbyist’s job is to convince the politician of voting a particular way.

A sleazy lobbyist may try money in indirect ways for/against the politician, but a regular one will try to raise awareness through advertising and public pressure. It’s all lobbying.

  • Lobbyists may engage in PR activity, but that does not make PR activity lobbying.

    Lobbying has a pretty clear definition which you are trying to stretch here.

    Let me put it this way: Airing an ad about a government rep or piece of legislation is PR or advertising. Using the threat or promise of airing that ad to try to talk a politician into doing something is lobbying.

lol we certainly have lobbying in Australia, they just apparently keep a lower profile than American lobbyists do.