“Lobby” in politics usually means lobbying: organized efforts to influence government decisions (e.g., laws, regulations, budgets) by engaging with public officials or legislators.[1]
What “lobby” can mean
- Lobbying (in the political/economic sense): Direct attempts—often involving registered lobbyists—to shape policy outcomes by meeting lawmakers and providing information or advocacy.[1]
- (UK-specific) The parliamentary “lobby”: In Westminster, “the lobby” can also refer to a journalist area and briefings system—distinct from lobbying for policy influence.[2]
- “The Lobby” (UK political term): A historic/briefing-related concept tied to how sources and briefings are handled in Westminster.[3]
Latest news angle (how I can help)
I can’t fetch and summarize the very latest breaking stories in this moment, but if you tell me which country you care about (UK, US, EU, etc.) or whether you mean lobbying firms/policy influence vs the Westminster “lobby”, I can give you targeted headlines and context from the right news sources.
Sources
lobbying Latest Breaking News, Pictures, Videos, and Special Reports from The Economic Times. lobbying Blogs, Comments and Archive News on Economictimes.com
economictimes.indiatimes.comThe latest Lobbying news information brought to you by the team at The Hill
thehill.comLobbying coverage from POLITICO.com including profiles of Washington Lobbying firms, PitBoss column by Jeanne Cummings, SuiteTalk, In The Shop, MatchUp, and Mother's Milk.
www.politico.comThe term ‘lobby’ is used to describe the group of journalists who cover political events in the UK.
www.instituteforgovernment.org.ukWe provide articles and news about lobbyists, our lobbying firm, politics, and events that occur in Washington DC. Click here to view our news page
lobbyit.com