Archive for the ‘Elect the Lords’ Category

I have noticed a lot of things change about me recently. A friend tells me, for example, that our tastebuds and so our tastes change every seven years. Whether or not this is true — and if it is whether it is definitely seven years for everyone — my tastes have definitely changed recently.

Last year I started to like apples. Earlier (maybe two years ago) I started to like cabbage and this Christmas, for the first time ever, I liked brussel sprouts.

And it’s not just food, last week I slept much less than normal (and didn’t feel tired). Come Thursday I decided I must just not be noticing the tiredness and so went to bed early. The result? I woke up at 4am on Friday morning feeling fully refreshed!

It’s also extended to politics and religion. On this site in the past I have been strongly against religion. I continue to be frightened by people who will do things in the name of God that I hope normal people would not do in the absence of His influence. But I can also feel sympathy for those people who do believe. I can feel what Dawkins has described — a feeling that God exists — which can be explained by biological means.

So, like all things, religion is not black and white. There are fundamentalist nutters at one extreme, a violent version of Richard Dawkins at the other and myself sitting nearer Richard Dawkins than Bin Laden, closer to the Dalai Lama than the Archbishop of Canterbury and closer to a vicar than a priest.

Why am I telling you this? Well, at almost regular intervals (perhaps the seven-year thing), I have come to see another aspect of life as grey rather than black, or as grey rather than white.

It’s a shame, with these newly discovered shades of grey, that we no longer have the diversity of political parties we once had. SDP, Liberals, Whigs, Radicals, Tories and Independents have now been replaced, to all intents and purposes by the Conservatives and Labour. And neither of these parties, for all their minor differences, reflects the opinion of more than (at a guess) 5% of the population. The so-called centre-ground, is actually the swing vote — a part of the population which has a particular opinion but has not bothered to make a firm decision about whether people should be taxed a lot or a little, and whether people should work hard or have a ‘right’ to the dole.

There’s another problem with the party system. I know Libertarians who would never vote UKIP or Tory even though they ought to be their natural home; and I know socialists who could never vote for Labour or the Liberal Democrats because of other policies.

In France, as I was discussing with a colleague the other day, the president must be elected, eventually, by more than 50% of the population through run-offs resulting in just two candidates. But why couldn’t this work when electing a parliament too? It would guarantee a working majority for a particular party (which I believe is important) while not disenfranchising the 66%-ish who do not vote for the eventual winner in most English elections (assuming the FPTP system we currently have provides a reasonable impression of the intentions of the electorate; which is doesn’t).




According to the right-wing press and (oddly) the BBC News Website, Cameron’s returning to logic-land and has now, in the space of two days, championed the proper Conservative ideals of lower immigration and tough action on crime.

The two years of near-silence on the subject has made one slightly cynical, but that he sees that he needs to talk about these issues is gratifying. Let’s hope, when or if he gets power on our behalf, he acts as he’s talking.

As I say to people when talking about these and other issues: It seems so obvious if you don’t allow the status quo to muddy your thinking. It is entirely moot how things are today, it is what we want them to be that matters and if the barriers to achieving that are significant, all the more worthy is the effort.


But for an alternative, the right wing would be deserting the Conservatives. The party has lost sight of its principles and what it stands for and I don’t believe I am alone in believing this. In fact, from ConservativeHome quoting the Daily Mail, this is what one learned commentator had to say:

“Mr Cameron has, so far, ridiculed the case for lower income tax, proposed higher taxes on air travel, denounced the Government’s modest health reforms as ‘frenetic’, suggested that hoodies need to be ‘loved’ (though not, now it seems, hugged), campaigned against public expenditure control, down-played the Atlantic Alliance and refused to back the overwhelming case for nuclear power. The party’s self-hatred is truly amazing. It has gone to such extraordinary lengths to express regret that it has even re-written history in the process.” - Robin Harris, former Downing Street advisor to Margaret Thatcher

Let’s start embracing right-wing thinking shall we?


I believe that we should have an elected head of state, I have done for a while. That Head of State would then be accountable to us, the people who elect him. Ken Livingstone, for all his failures, has a much stronger claim to a mandate than any Prime Minister.

I consider, though, the case of John Major between 1990 and 1992 and Gordon Brown from now until the next election, as particular strong arguments in my favour. While defenders of our system claim we elect a local MP to Parliament the truth, as we all know, is that the personality of the leader is the way many people make their decision.

Tony Blair promised to stay leader for the whole term during the election and yet we are now saddled with an effective Head of State (he has the right to sign treaties etc) who no-one except those in his constituency elected.

But how much more serious is the problem now? We’ll have a Prime Minister who is not democratically accountable to his constituents for 75% of the decisions the British government makes. That 75% has been devolved to the Scottish Parliament for his constituents so for health, education, transport and so many other policies his beliefs and espousals would have no bearing on those who were voting for him. These policies would only effect England, and to some extent Wales.

So Gordon Brown is in a precarious position for two reasons: He has never been elected as a Head of State and yet that is what he is (de facto). He has never been elected to decide policy on devolved issues by anyone and yet it is those policies that he will spend most of his time upon.

The answers are two-fold: An English Parliament to solve the first and an elected Head of State to solve the second.

The Government yesterday showed breathtaking contempt for the law and the public as it attempted to bury the bad news of spiralling costs of the ID cards project on the day that Tony Blair announced his resignation.

The announcement was slipped out more than a month past the legally binding deadline when the Government should have issued the new figures - not surprising given that it revealed that costs have risen by a whopping £640m in the last six months.

More details of the announcement, and the Liberal Democrat response, can be found here:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/6642339.stm
http://www.libdems.org.uk/news/government-has-broken-law-to-bury-bad-news-on-id-cards-clegg.html

Even the most hardened supporters of ID cards must now accept that public resistance to such a wasteful, intrusive and unnecessary project is set to harden significantly as the excessive cost to taxpayers becomes more apparent.

Yours,

Nick Clegg MP
Liberal Democrat Shadow Home Secretary


I’ve not read this in any detail but some interesting thoughts on changing the democratic system here: Abi Rhodes.


Clever old Wonko and his friend and fellow Witanagemot member, Kev, have placed the blog war posts in parallel — visible on the same screen.

See the two posts together.

What have we all in common? We believe England should have a Parliament