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Paper 1 UK Politics · Pressure Groups + Other Influences

Non-party influence on UK government · one-page reference

Five non-party actor types across three policy areas, with method and outcome for every named example.
How to read this sheet. Each cell holds the named non-party actors operating in that policy area, the method they use to influence government, and the contemporary outcome examiners reward. The strongest 30-mark answers compare across actor types - so use this sheet horizontally (within one area: who pushed hardest on the environment?) and vertically (within one actor type: how do pressure groups operate across all three areas?). Wyn Grant's three-tier insider classification (core / specialist / peripheral) is woven into the pressure-group cells.
Actor (method) outcome on government policy
Economics
Rights
Environment
Pressure groupsmembership-based; insider/outsider; sectional/cause
  • BMA (core insider, lobbying) 2024 junior doctors' pay deal via direct DHSC negotiation - no industrial action needed at the final stage.
  • NFU (core insider + mass mobilisation) Nov 2024 tractor convoys to Whitehall forced partial retreat on farm inheritance tax.
  • NEU (strikes) 2023 teacher pay settlement above initial Conservative offer.
  • RMT (strikes) 2022-24 sustained rail action; wage rises secured.
  • Criminal Bar Association (strike action) 2022 walkout forced 15% legal aid fee rise.
  • CBI (core insider until 2023, then peripheral) Sat on government advisory committees pre-2023; lost insider status after the misconduct crisis; partly rebuilding under Labour.
  • Liberty (legal action) Judicial reviews of the Public Order Acts 2022 and 2023 on protest rights.
  • Stonewall (legal intervention + media) Intervened in For Women Scotland v Scottish Ministers at the UK Supreme Court 2025 - the Court ruled "sex" in the Equality Act 2010 means biological sex.
  • Howard League for Penal Reform (specialist insider + media) Kept the 2024-25 prisons-overcrowding crisis in the news; pushed for the early-release scheme.
  • Care4Calais (outsider direct action + legal) Blocked individual Rwanda removal flights through last-minute legal challenges 2022.
  • Amnesty International UK (media campaigns) Annual reports drive UK rights-record press cycles.
  • Migration Watch UK (media + research) Sustained media presence; shaped Reform UK and Conservative migration positions.
  • ClientEarth (legal action) 2022 judicial review found UK Net Zero Strategy unlawful; government forced to publish stronger version 2023.
  • Greenpeace UK (media investigation + legal) 2024 legal challenge to the Rosebank North Sea oil licence; investigative reporting on deep-sea mining.
  • Friends of the Earth (legal + grassroots) Joined ClientEarth in 2022 net zero ruling; campaigns against new oil and gas.
  • Just Stop Oil (outsider direct action) M25 protests 2022; Van Gogh painting; World Snooker disruption. High coverage, no policy change; Court of Appeal upheld custodial sentences 2024.
  • Extinction Rebellion (outsider direct action) 2019 London occupation forced Parliament to declare a climate emergency.
Think tanksresearch + ideas; ideological lean
  • Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA) + Centre for Policy Studies (CPS) - the Tufton Street cluster (research + media + ministerial briefings) Wrote much of Truss's Sept 2022 "mini-budget"; collapse of the bond market discredited the package but the network remains active.
  • TaxPayers' Alliance (media + research) Sustained tax-cut campaigning across two decades of Conservative governments.
  • Adam Smith Institute (research) Long-running source of market-liberal policy proposals.
  • Resolution Foundation (research, centre-ground) Low-pay and living-standards analysis; influential on Living Wage policy under both Cameron and Starmer.
  • Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) (research, centre-left) Social-policy ideas adopted by Labour 2024 (early-years investment; child-poverty strategy).
  • Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) (statutory body; research + enforcement) Operates in a similar policy space; investigated parties over antisemitism (Labour 2019) and Conservative Islamophobia.
  • Bright Blue (research, centre-right) Liberal-conservative input on immigration and climate within the Tory party.
  • Runnymede Trust (race-equality research) Critical of the 2021 Sewell Report on race; reports on structural inequality.
  • Green Alliance (cross-party research) Routinely cited in net zero policymaking; shaped public spending bids on climate.
  • New Economics Foundation (NEF) (research, centre-left) Green New Deal and just-transition ideas now mainstream in Labour environment policy.
  • Onward (research, centre-right) Post-2019 Conservative environmental thinking; "Net Zero with the public".
  • Ember (energy data + research) Coal-phase-out tracking; sets the factual baseline for energy debate.
Lobbyistspaid public-affairs firms
  • Cicero Consulting (consultant public affairs) Long-running financial-services lobbying.
  • Hanbury Strategy (consultant lobbying) Co-founded by Paul Stephenson, former Director of Communications at Vote Leave; financial and tech clients.
  • Tetra Strategy, Lexington Communications (general public affairs) Cover banking, transport, infrastructure.
  • Caveat: the Transparency of Lobbying Act 2014 only registers consultant lobbyists. In-house corporate teams are unregistered.
  • Specialist rights-only lobbying firms are rare. In-house tech teams (Meta, Google, X) have lobbied directly on the Online Safety Act 2023 - this is technically corporate lobbying, but functionally rights policy.
  • PR firms used by rights groups - Stonewall, Liberty and Amnesty engage smaller specialist agencies for media strategy, not Whitehall lobbying.
  • Trade-body lobbying on rights-adjacent policy (the Federation of Small Businesses on employment law; tech industry bodies on data and online safety).
  • APCO Worldwide (general public affairs) Energy clients across oil, nuclear and renewables.
  • WPI Strategy (consultant lobbying) Energy and infrastructure clients.
  • Caveat: oil and gas in-house lobbying (Shell, BP) is much larger than the consultant sector - unregistered under the 2014 Act. The biggest environmental lobbying is invisible on the public record.
Corporationsde facto core insiders
  • Stellantis (owner of Vauxhall) (direct Whitehall lobbying) 2024 softening of UK Zero Emission Vehicle mandate; Nov 2024 announcement that the Luton plant would close March 2025 used as direct pressure on industrial strategy.
  • Tata Steel (direct lobbying + structural employer power) 2024 Port Talbot transition deal: £500m government subsidy for electric arc furnace.
  • Tesco (advisory committees + lobbying) Food regulation; supply-chain rules; HFSS (high fat, salt, sugar) restrictions delayed twice.
  • Amazon (in-house lobbying) Warehouse working conditions, tax-avoidance and competition policy.
  • Meta, Google, X (in-house lobbying + threats to leave market) Shaped Online Safety Act 2023 implementation; X (Musk) publicly clashed with UK regulators 2024-25.
  • Supermarkets (Tesco, Sainsbury's, Aldi) (in-house + trade body) Modern Slavery Act compliance; gangmaster regulation; worker-rights legislation lobbied via the British Retail Consortium.
  • Big Pharma (GSK, AstraZeneca, Pfizer) (in-house lobbying) NHS medicines pricing; access-to-medicines policy.
  • Shell, BP (in-house lobbying + structural power) Rosebank North Sea oil licence approved Sept 2023; subsequent softening of 2030 petrol/diesel ban under Sunak (now reinstated under Labour for 2030).
  • Drax (in-house lobbying + large employer) Continuation of biomass subsidies despite environmental controversy; new deal under negotiation 2024-25.
  • E.ON, Centrica, Octopus (in-house lobbying) Energy price cap design; Warm Home Discount; consumer pricing.
  • JCB (Bamford family) (donor + lobbying) Influence over Conservative environment policy; hydrogen-vehicle backing.

Media

The umbrella through which every other actor reaches government. Press sets the daily political weather; digital platforms decide which methods go viral and which sink.

Traditional press

  • Daily Mail, Telegraph, Express (right-of-centre agenda-setting) - immigration framing, tax-cut pressure, "eco-zealot" framing of JSO. Stiffened the Public Order Acts 2022 and 2023.
  • Guardian, Mirror (centre-left) - workplace rights, environmental campaigns, oversight journalism on ministers.
  • Financial Times (business) - influences Treasury and City; broke the 2022 mini-budget bond-market story.

Broadcast + statutory

  • BBC News (statutory neutrality) - largest single news reach; sets the daily political agenda. Independence repeatedly contested by ministers (Tory complaints over impartiality; impartiality reviews 2023-24).
  • Sky News (commercial broadcaster) - significant agenda-setting via Beth Rigby political-editor coverage.
  • GB News, Talk TV (right-wing broadcast) - drives Conservative and Reform debate; hosts active politicians (Farage, Rees-Mogg).

Digital + platforms

  • X (Twitter) (algorithmic amplification) - elite political conversation. Owner Elon Musk publicly clashed with UK government over 2024 Southport unrest and online safety.
  • TikTok (short-form video, recommendation algorithm) - 2024 election ground-campaigning channel for Reform UK and the Greens; reaches younger voters bypassed by traditional press.
  • 38 Degrees, Change.org (online petitioning) - reach millions of signatures; function as mobilisation lists for future campaigns rather than direct pressure on policy.
  • Influencer politics - Carol Vorderman 2023-24 anti-Conservative campaigning on X reached audiences larger than most established pressure groups.
Source: Politics Panther topic pack · see Walk-through and Notes pages for full analysis · cite this sheet alongside the named methods (insider lobbying, direct action, legal action, mass mobilisation, media campaigns) when planning a 30-mark answer.