Element 1 of 8
Pressure groups - core
What the topic is, in two sentences
A pressure group is an organised group that tries to influence government decisions without seeking to form a government itself. The spec asks you to understand how they exert influence, why some are more successful than others, and how they sit alongside think tanks, lobbyists, corporations and the media as influences on UK politics.
Spec sub-sections (Paper 1, P1.1.3)
- P1.1.3.a How different pressure groups exert influence and how their methods and influence vary in contemporary politics.
- P1.1.3.b Case studies of two different pressure groups, highlighting examples of how their methods and influence vary.
- P1.1.3.c Other collective organisations and groups including think tanks, lobbyists and corporations, and their influence on government and Parliament.
The three most-asked exam questions on this topic
Question type 1
Evaluate the view that the actions of pressure groups have been more significant than parties / the media / other influences in influencing government policy.
2020 Q2(a) and variants 2019, 2022, 2024. The most common 30-mark framing.
Question type 2
Using the source, evaluate the view that pressure groups have little influence in UK politics today.
2023M Q1(b), 2025 Q1(b). Source-style 30-mark question.
Question type 3
Evaluate the view that think tanks, lobbyists and corporations have greater influence than pressure groups.
2024 Q2(a), 2019 Q2(a). The "other influences" variant.
The default line of argument
LoA: Pressure groups remain a significant force in UK politics but their influence is increasingly uneven. Sectional insider groups with technical expertise (BMA, NFU, CBI) shape policy quietly; well-resourced cause groups with judicial-review capacity (ClientEarth, Liberty) win major battles in court; mass-mobilisation outsider groups (JSO, Insulate Britain) shift the agenda but rarely the policy. Think tanks and corporate lobbyists are now the bigger story on tax, regulation and macroeconomic policy.
Pick this LoA for the Q2a question type. Pick a sharper "pressure groups have lost ground to think tanks and corporate lobbying" line if the question puts those alongside.
The five things you need to be able to name in your sleep
- Insider vs Outsider (Wyn Grant): groups with regular access to government vs groups without. The most-rewarded analytical distinction.
- Sectional vs Cause: groups representing a specific economic / professional interest (BMA, NFU, CBI) vs groups campaigning for a wider belief (JSO, ClientEarth).
- Wyn Grant's three tiers: core insider (institutionalised access, e.g. NFU + DEFRA), specialist insider (consulted on technical questions), peripheral insider (occasional access). Most exam answers stop at "insider vs outsider" — the tiers earn AO2 marks.
- Five methods of influence: insider lobbying, media campaigns, mass demonstrations, judicial review, direct action. Each has a recent named example.
- The "other influences" group: think tanks (IEA, ASI, Tufton Street), corporate lobbyists (Greensill 2021), media outlets, devolved governments. The spec puts these alongside pressure groups in P1.1.3.c.
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