John Singleton with Bob HowardRip Van Australia (Stanmore: Cassell Australia, 1977), pp. 155-57, under the heading “Lobbies”.

Modern government is pressure group warfare. The modern variation on the democratic process is the numbers game. The principal players in these modern dramas are the governments and the lobbies. Taken in its broadest perspective, the result of the drama is a continuous growth in the size, cost, influence and power of the government, and a continuous retreat by the lobbies — a retreat involving a continuous process of compromise and selling out of principle, freedom and opportunity for short-term survival. The lobbies are trading short-term peace for long-term suicide.

In a smaller context, various lobbies are deceived by temporary “wins”. These “wins” are seldom at the expense of the government. They are usually at the expense of other lobbies. Thus, manufacturing industry wins tariff protection at the expense of primary industry and consumers in general; or the mining industry wins concessions at the expense of the environmentalists, or the Aboriginals. Or vice versa.

Some lobbies come into being specifically for the purpose of pressuring the government for privileges, for example, many business lobbies. Others come into being for self-defence, for example other business lobbies, and special interest groups such as W.E.L., Festival of Light, Friends of the Earth. Still others, the government actually creates. Some lobbies are formed to protect broad sectional interests from the government, while others are formed to protect some sections of the sectional interest from exploitation by others.

The entire lobbying process has been greatly refined over the years, and a quite symbiotic relationship exists between the lobbies and the government. The government obviously has to consider the trend of government thinking in drafting submissions. There is a frequent interchange of staff from side to side — appropriately termed, changes in status from gamekeeper to poacher. Many journalists and ex-public servants now occupy key positions in the various lobbying organisations. These people bring contacts and knowledge of the power structure into the service of the lobbies.

Many organisations have settled quite comfortably into this game. They do very well out of it. Competition is restricted, they enjoy their share of the privileges, and profits are acceptable. But they are being lulled into a false sense of security, because the overwhelming trend is along the path taken years earlier by England.

Unless companies, industries, pressure groups and individuals start to consider morality instead of numbers, long-run consequences instead of immediate gratifications, fair and just rewards for effort instead of privileges, and principles rather than expediency, the current trend towards a totalitarian State will continue unabated.

The various special interest groups have to start looking beyond their respective front doors, and have to realise that instead of fighting each other, they should unite against their common enemy — bureaucratic government.