Many people might wonder how it can possibly be that none of the UK officials (former or past) currently facing questions about their role in lobbying appear to have broken any rules. A quick look through the legislation reveals why.
First there was the Greensill scandal, in which former prime minister David Cameron on behalf of the financial firm that was employing him. Then there was Bill Crothers, the senior civil servant who was found to have had a . Then it was revealed that Boris Johnson, the current prime minister, had been James Dyson about UK tax laws.
Cameron has apologised. Crothers claims to have and Johnson says he will for his actions.
These events have laid bare the inadequacy of the laws and institutions that are supposed to ensure fairness and transparency in the UK. No-one involved in this scandal appears to have broken the law. Cameron’s actions were not covered by legislation regulating the lobbying industry. Crothers’s appointment to Greensill was apparently approved by the Cabinet Office. And it’s not against the law for a businessman to text the prime minister.
Lord Pickles, the chair of the Advisory Committee for Business Appointments which oversees the rules on former government officials taking new jobs, admitted that the committee has almost no power and is limited to providing advice . The , charged with managing the statutory register of lobbyists established in 2015, has very limited powers and is headed by a part-time civil servant.
Read the full article in The Conversation .