Lobbying

Here’s the lobbying → legislative process in Botswana, step by step, showing how an idea from an interest group can eventually become law.

1. Issue identification (Interest group stage)

A group identifies a problem in society or the economy.

This could be:

  • NGOs (e.g. gender rights groups)
  • Trade unions
  • Business associations (like BOCCIM / Business Botswana)
  • Student bodies or civic movements

They don’t start with law yet — they start with a policy problem, like:

  • “Domestic violence laws are weak”
  • “Tax rules hurt SMEs”
  • “Labour protections are outdated”

2. Policy formulation (Lobbying begins)

The group starts shaping a solution proposal.

They:

  • Draft position papers
  • Gather statistics and case studies
  • Compare foreign laws (South Africa, UK, etc.)
  • Propose model legal reforms

This is where lobbying starts properly:
They begin influencing:

  • Ministries (especially relevant ones like Justice, Labour, Finance)
  • Members of Parliament
  • Law reform bodies

Lobbying methods include:

  • Meetings with MPs
  • Submissions to ministries
  • Public campaigns and media pressure
  • Stakeholder workshops

3. Engagement with the Executive (Key gateway in Botswana)

In Botswana, most bills originate from the Executive (Cabinet and Ministries), not MPs.

So lobbyists target:

  • Permanent Secretaries
  • Ministers
  • Attorney General’s Chambers (for drafting support)

If the government is convinced, the issue enters the policy agenda.

4. Cabinet approval (Gatekeeping stage)

The relevant ministry prepares a Cabinet memo proposing law reform.

Cabinet decides:

  • Whether the idea becomes government policy
  • Whether a Bill should be drafted

If approved → drafting begins.

If rejected → lobbying must continue or be redirected.

5. Drafting of the Bill

Legal drafters (usually the Attorney General’s Chambers) convert policy into legal language.

At this stage:

  • Technical legal wording is created

Lobbying sometimes continues here through:

  • Technical consultations

6. Pre-parliament consultation

Before Parliament, government may consult:

  • Stakeholders (interest groups again)
  • NGOs and professional bodies
  • Private sector

This is a critical lobbying window where changes can still be made.

7. Introduction to Parliament

The Bill is introduced in the National Assembly (Botswana Parliament).

This is where formal legislative procedure begins:

  • First Reading: Bill is presented (no debate yet)

8. Second Reading (Debate stage)

Members of Parliament debate:

  • Principle of the Bill (not details yet)

This is where lobbying becomes visible again:

  • MPs reflect constituency pressure
  • Interest groups push media narratives
  • Ministers defend the Bill

If MPs reject it here → it fails.

9. Committee Stage (Detailed scrutiny)

The Bill goes to a parliamentary committee.

Here:

  • Clause-by-clause analysis happens
  • Experts may be invited
  • Stakeholders can submit written or oral evidence

This is one of the most powerful lobbying stages, because:

  • Amendments are actively made here
  • Technical arguments matter more than politics

10. Report Stage & Amendments

Committee reports back to Parliament.

MPs:

  • Accept or reject amendments
  • Fine-tune wording

Lobbying now focuses on:

  • Persuading MPs to support amendments
  • Preventing unwanted clauses

11. Third Reading (Final vote in National Assembly)

Parliament votes on the final Bill.

If passed → it moves forward.
If rejected → it dies unless reintroduced later.

12. Presidential Assent

The Bill is sent to the President for assent.

Once signed:

  • It becomes law
  • It is published in the Government Gazette

13. Implementation phase

Ministries enforce the law through:

  • Regulations
  • Administrative systems
  • Courts interpreting the law

Lobbying doesn’t stop here — groups may still push for:

  • Better regulations
  • Amendments in future reforms