DutchNews, May 15,
2017
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| The Dutch parliamentary complex in The Hague. Photo: DutchNews.nl |
The caretaker Dutch cabinet has approved new
rules to try to stop former ministers taking up new jobs as lobbyists in a
similar field.
The measure, approved by ministers at last week’s cabinet
meeting, will stop ex ministers having ‘business contacts’ with their old
department for two years.
This is to stop them ‘using their knowledge and
position in an undesirable way to promote the interests of an organisation
where they have gone to work after leaving,’ home affairs minister Ronald Plasterk said.
There have been several cases of former ministers using their
parliamentary contacts to lobby new officials. A year ago, former foreign
affairs minister Ben Bot came under fire when he lobbied for a export permit
for a shipping firm he had been hired to represent.
KLM
Other examples include
economic affairs minister Maxime Verhagen who became head of the construction
sector lobby group within a year of leaving the ministry and transport minister
Camiel Eurlings who joined airline KLM.
MPs had also called for measures to
stop the revolving door between ministries and the private sector. The defence
ministry already had a two-year lobby ban.
Socialist MP Ronald van Raak
welcomed the new move but said it does not go far enough. The ban does not
affect MPs or senior civil servants and does not apply to trade missions, he
pointed out in the NRC. In addition, the secretary general of a ministry can
also suspend the measure on a temporary basis.

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