The new PM shows no sign of seeking a broad consensus on great national issues, no indication that he will make good on his promises during the leadership election and try to bring the country together.
Democracy is by definition a system of disappointment. I understand
that. Generally speaking, for the majority to win, the minority has to
lose – and the game only works if the losing side respects what has
happened and goes along with it. So I accept that Leave won the
referendum in 2016 (though one can argue about their methods), and I
accept that we have a Conservative government, which I do not like and
for which I did not vote. All of this, however disagreeable to me and
people who think like me, I accept as true.
Today, though, the
game has changed in subtle but sinister ways, and it seems the rules are
no longer being observed. If I’m right, and that is the case, then the
concept of democracy itself in the UK, of the right of the majority to
have its way but its duty also to respect and acknowledge the rights of
the minority, is seriously under threat.
Boris Johnson is the
prime minister. This has not been universally well received, to put it
mildly: for a while around the time of his elevation, the hashtag
#NotMyPM was trending on Twitter, as people of all parties and none
rejected the idea that this unelected ideologue, lacking a mandate but
possessed of what seems like boundless determination, could even hope to
represent the 60+ million people of the United Kingdom. And the numbers
are important here: Johnson was nominated by 92,000 Conservative Party
members, tacitly accepted by the 311 MPs in the Parliamentary
Conservative Party, and formally appointed by just one, Her Majesty The
Queen. So much for the popular vote.
It is not just the nature of
Johnson’s elevation, the closed circuit of like-minded individuals
talking to each other, which causes scepticism and concern among the
wider electorate. It is the fact that the new PM shows no sign of
seeking a broad consensus on great national issues, no indication that
he will make good on his promises during the leadership election and try
to bring the country together. On the contrary, it seems that he is set
on pursuing a hard, no deal Brexit, forced through (or around) an
unwilling Parliament, assisted by a hard-right collection of ministers
and advisers like Dominic Raab, Michael Gove and the Svengali of the
piece, Dominic Cummings.
"If a government can bypass
Parliament, the sovereign body of the people, then any institution – the
courts, the police, the Armed Forces – can be circumvented, or bent to
the will of the new masters. We ignore this at our peril.
Chris Wright
Co-Founder and Chairman of Chrysalis Group
This
is desperately dangerous for our democratic institutions. Of course, a
prime minister elected midway through a parliament will not enjoy the
same kind of popular mandate as one who has just triumphed at a general
election, and they will sometimes seek their own mandate as a matter of
urgency, like Anthony Eden in 1955. But the British constitution, such
as it is, relies on a common understanding of, and adherence to, a
diffuse set of rules and conventions. If a prime minister like Boris
Johnson comes along, intent of tearing up those rules, we are in a
dangerous place indeed.
Take the much-discussed plan to prorogue
Parliament so that it is not sitting when a No Deal Brexit takes place
by default on 31 October. This is, according to a strict interpretation
of the rules of procedure, perfectly permissible. No-one is acting ultra
vires and defined powers are being exercised in a legal way. But it
would clearly be a democratic outrage if the PM were to force through a
no deal Brexit - for which no-one has voted - simply by avoiding even
putting the question to the elected legislature. It may be legal, it may
be orderly, but it just isn’t right.
Where does it stop? Dominic
Cummings is famously disdainful for the processes of Whitehall and
Westminster – remember, this is a man who was found in contempt of
parliament because he refused to attend a select committee hearing to
which he had been formally summoned. Institutions do not matter to him,
except that they are convenient Aunt Sallys, to be pelted repeatedly and
savagely until they fall. If a government can bypass Parliament, the
sovereign body of the people, then any institution – the courts, the
police, the Armed Forces – can be circumvented, or bent to the will of
the new masters. We ignore this at our peril. We have to realise that we
are at a crossroads, and if we don’t choose the path to restoring our
democratic institutions, to engaging better with the electorate, to
respecting the independence of our pillars of state, then we’re looking
at a hard road ahead of us indeed.
* Chris Wright, CBE is Co-Founder and Chairman of Chrysalis Group.
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* Opinions expressed in View articles are solely those of the authors.