Fraser Nelson reviews the week in politics
Little wonder that Gordon Brown is gravely concerned about the state of British democracy. Labour’s poll rating has this week hit a (new) postwar low — and that was before Thursday’s elections. As the Prime Minister waits in misery for the final results on Sunday he may be tempted to recall the satirical words of Bertolt Brecht: ‘Wouldn’t it be easier to dissolve the people and elect another in their place?’ But Brown will go one better. He intends to change Britain’s constitutional system: the rules of the game, so to speak.
His plan for a National Council for Democratic Renewal deserves to be taken seriously. No matter how pitiful a figure Mr Brown strikes in Number 10, he still has the power — in theory, at least — to enact whatever reform he wishes. He has, in this case, a strong motive to do so. To survive in Number 10 he must argue, however implausibly, that anger and contempt for the system in general has simply become focused upon the governing party specifically. This is not a rejection of Labour, he must argue, but an instruction to clean up politics.
Admittedly, he has a point. It is undeniable that the voters are dissatisfied with the Westminster system as a whole. David Cameron himself does not claim that his 20-point opinion poll lead reflects an overwhelming nationwide clamour for a Tory government. Cameron’s slogan is ‘Vote for Change’ — but change to what? There is every chance that the Prime Minister will simply impose his own personal blueprint upon Westminster, after declaring that his National Council has successfully intuited the will of the nation.
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Dr.Axel Ridder
June 4th, 2009 5:17pm Report this commentPrimeminister Brown, who did a good job in the financial crisis,should now take the lead in electoral reform.2008 in the average you only had 18,3% women in parliaments worldwide: Uk 19,5%. Now is the time for a brave move in order to make history.
It would set an example for US, UK, Thailand, Germany, Indonesia and The Netherlands. Go to the following webpages: German and English: http://www.2009-de.com ; English only: http://www.squidoo.com/2009demokraten and http://hubpages.com/hub/Real-changes-in-democracy; http://twitter.com/democrats2009
Three-persons-constituency with relative majority voting: Each party puts up two candidates: a woman and a man. One party wins two seats: a woman and a man. The second strongest party gets one seat only: a woman OR a man. Two thirds of parliamentarian seats are mathematically guaranteed for women, with a tendency to 50%. This election system is a triumph of evolution of mankind because it has an inherent tendency to reason.As this election system reduces strongholds, a majority in a constituency and in parliament becomes very narrow. The fear to loose power will bring an inherent tendency to reason and responsibility.Read first before you judge this statement.
Richard Lung
June 4th, 2009 7:48pm Report this commentThere is not much hope for democracy until politicians and reformers, for proportional representation, are honest enough to give the voters a transferable vote rather than confine the preference vote to an oligarchy of party-list makers.
Rhys Burriss
June 4th, 2009 9:19pm Report this commentAttempting to do so much at once is over ambitious - there will be insufficient consensus to enable speedy decisions to be reached on such a range of ideas. It will be kicked into the long grass.
But what could be done ( and which would be extremely effective in getting into Parliament persons of wide and deep experience OUTSIDE politics [ unlike the present load of MPs' bag carriers and researchers] ) and should surely be comparatively easy to agree on would be the opening up of the selection process for parties' candidates for MP .
Open Primaries Now in other words.
I doubt very much if the new intake ( much less the old) will be that enthusiastic for a reform which lessens their own likelihood of re-election. OPEN PRIMARIES NOW needs no legislation and costs nothing.
The constituency parties should be allowed to choose whomever they wish - perhaps pre-selecting 3 or 4 candidates any one of which they could live with. Then the final selection could be opened to a public meeting at which all attending could listen to, discuss with the candidates - and make their choice. It would at last give ordinary people a real choice as to who their MP is, whether the seat is 'safe' or not under the present system. Yet party discipline in the Commons can still be maintained, if perhaps less tightly than hitherto.
At least the as yet unselected-for constituencies could trial this between now and the General Election. What harm could possibly arise ?
paul gilboy
June 6th, 2009 10:06am Report this commentA written constitution along the lines of the american model will give us a frame work to start with.
The first line should read the sovereignty of the english people is invested in the parliament of the english people and this is inviolable.
No treaty could bind us, no government can sell us.
We will no longer be at the mercy of fashion or whim, ego or individual.
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