Cash for access

Cash for access refers to the exchange of money for delivering meetings with senior office-holders, such as politicians. In the United Kingdom (UK), which has seen a number of cash for access scandals, the public consider the practice sleazy and degrading British politics.[1]: 186 

The phrased emerged following the 1998 Derek Draper "Lobbygate" scandal in the UK.[1]: 184  Similar practices are "cash for questions" and "cash for honours", coined, respectively, following the Cash-for-questions (1994) and Cash-for-Honours (2006-7) scandals in the UK.[1]: 184–185  These can all be described as "cash for favour scenarios".[1]: 184 

Those receiving the money might be individuals or institutions, such as political parties, and the practice might be openly practiced - such as fundraising dinners for which guests pay large sums of money to dine with politicians - or potentially illegal.[1]: 185  The practice is global, having occurred in countries such as the UK, Australia, Canada and China, and historic examples can be seen as far back as at least the early twentieth century.[1]: 185–186 

Examples

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Webb, Jonathan (17 January 2018). "Cash for access (UK)". In Ledeneva, Alena (ed.). The Global Encyclopaedia of Informality, Volume 1: Towards Understanding of Social and Cultural Complexity. London: UCL Press. pp. 184–187. ISBN 978-1-911307-89-1. Retrieved 26 February 2026.