In the last 2 years, number of MPs declaring their meetings with interest groups or lobbyists doubles

In spring of 2017, 45 Lithuanian MPs announced 475 meetings. In autumn of 2018, 82 Lithuanian MPs announced 737 meetings.

The highest number of meetings (50) were declared by Seimas Chairman Viktoras Pranckietis, Minister of the Economy and Innovation, Virginijus Sinkevičius (41), and Lithuanian Farmers and Greens Union political group’s members Virginija Vingrienė (40), Kęstutis Mažeika (31) and Guoda Burokienė (28).

The most active, as of the 2018 spring session, was the Liberal Movement political group—10 out of 12 members publicized with what interest groups they met (93 meetings). 39 politicians out of 51 announced meetings in the Lithuanian Farmer and Green Union Group (438 meetings).

“A good politician is an active and transparent politician. I am glad that more and more members of Parliament and politicians throughout the entire country are taking up the habit of being transparent about whom they meet and what those meetings are about,” says Sergejus Muravjovas, the CEO of Transparency International Lithuania.

There are politicians in all political groups in the Seimas who announced their meetings. However, only 4 out of 8 chairmen of political groups publicize their meetings with interest groups’ representatives. At least a few meetings were publicized by the chairwoman of the Liberal Movement political group Viktorija Čmilytė-Nielsen (9), chairman of Lithuanian Social Democratic Party Julius Sabatauskas (9), chairman of Lithuanian Farmers and Greens Union political group Ramūnas Karbauskis (5) and the chairwoman of the Electoral Action of Poles in Lithuania – Christian Families Alliance political group Rita Tamašunienė (2).

Chairpeople of Order and Justice Political Group, Lithuanian Social Democratic Labour Political Group, Homeland Union-Lithuanian Christian Democrat Political Group, and Non-attached Members group haven’t published any meetings.

The largest number of meetings were held with NGO representatives (229), business associations and businessmen (192), science (144), and medicine (47). 9 Parliamentarians claimed their meetings with registered lobbyists (11).

For research purposes, the only information that was publicly available between 10th of September 2018 and 16th of February 2019 was taken from official working calendars, personal websites, and entries made in manosusitikimai.lt about the interest groups that the parliamentarians met with.

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