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Westminster
Punch And Judy
“PMQs are another example of the corruption of politics”
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When the MPs pack their
sun cream and head off for their long summer break they may leave
behind a number of people who are anxious that the country is uncared
for, unprotected, ungoverned. There are others who may simply resent
being deprived of their weekly fix of Prime Ministers Questions .
These last have unusual tastes, suggesting that they will not be
easily diverted onto a substitute, however proper. They will not be
consoled by suckling on an ice cream, on the beach at Blackpool or
Margate or Southwold, contentedly watching a Punch and Judy Show.
Prime Ministers
Questions
(or PMQs) is an institution promoted as evidence of the virility of
British parliamentary democracy. As a regular, important part of
House of Commons procedure it began in the 1950s, since when it has
not been immune from the juggling and manoeuvring customary to our
leaders in Westminster. In 1997 Tony Blair announced that New Labour
would not only abolish poverty, introduce open government and run an
ethical foreign policy but also replace the two 15 minute session of
PMQs on Tuesday and Thursday with one of a half hour on Wednesday.
The first question of each session must be directed at the Prime
Minister, asking about arrangements for the day; parliamentary
procedure then demands that the same person must reply to all other
questions, whatever the subject. By this ruse the Prime Minister is
prevented from avoiding inconvenient questions by passing them on to
some inadequately briefed underling squirming nervously on the front
bench.
Ineffective
The word
“answer” must
be allowed a loose interpretation in this context because what is
recorded as an “answer” is very often little more than an evasion
– perhaps a reply to a question which has not been asked – or a
denial, or a straightforward lie. All of which is perfectly
understandable for if the Prime Minister were to deal truthfully with
questions about how their government was fumbling with the typical
problems of capitalist society – like the current “credit crunch”
– it would reveal how utterly ineffective they were. And that is
not supposed to be what PMQs is about.
More usually,
far from
being an opportunity to openly examine a government’s record, PMQs
is treated by the MPs as encouragement to behave like excessively
unruly children. While a party leader is speaking there is a line of
compliant sycophants on the bench behind, nodding like demented
marionettes at what they wish us to believe are crucial and
conclusive points of argument. The feeblest of jokes – like Vince
Cable’s famous sneer about Gordon Brown transforming himself from
Stalin to Mr. Bean – has the MPs in paroxysms of helpless laughter.
The most ineffective reply to a question – like Brown endlessly
reciting statistics which have been cooked up to show, in the face of
cruel reality, that his government has us all wallowing in prosperity
– will be bolstered by a thunder of approval.
Cameron
When he
became
leader of his party in 2005 David Cameron promised that, as part of
his drive to change the face of politics for the better, he would end
the Punch and Judy aspect of PMQs. However as it dawned on him that
Gordon Brown was not as formidable an opponent at the Despatch Box as
he had feared he forgot his promise and emerged as an enthusiast
participant in the knockabout. On a recent Today
programme on Radio Four he admitted that “I will absolutely hold up
my hands and say this is a promise I have not been able to
deliver…The quieter tone I’d hoped we might be able to have, the
better discussion of politics at Prime Minister’s Questions,
doesn’t work”. He did not say whether breaking this promise,
comparatively unimportant as it was, should encourage confidence that
he will in future robustly keep his word on more vital matters, or
whether the affair exposes him as a trickster no better than the
ministers he so zestfully attacks.
Anyone who
doubts that
PMQs are little more than just another example of the corruption of
politics need only consider the tradition of the Planted Question.
These are asked, usually to a storm of jeering from the opposition
and of approval from the government side, by a back bencher who has
an assurance that their compliance will not exactly damage their
promotion prospects. A typical style would be “Would my Right
Honourable Friend (that’s the Prime Minister) agree that in spite
of what the brainless rabble on the other side think this is the most
caring, competent and effective government this country has ever…”
A particularly instructive example was in July, when Richard Burden,
MP for Birmingham Northfield – who is not famous for toeing the
party line – got dutifully to his feet to ask whether Britain’s
current problems are not caused by economic contamination from
abroad. The resultant protests were so noisy that the Speaker told
Burden to shut up before he had finished. This snub did not prevent
Gordon Brown answering the partial “question”, although he might
not have been able to hear it. Eagerly joining the Punch and Judy
show he had promised to abolish, Cameron cuttingly commented that
“You don’t have to finish a planted question to get a planted
answer” – which ignored the fact that in the past Tory
governments were happy to use the same deception.
No part of our
lives can
be untouched by the corruption bred into the property basis and the
class relationships of capitalism. The politics of the system, played
out by the parties in the seats of government, are immutably shaped
by it. At times this corruption is so blatant that it almost seems
the only proper response is outraged, incredulous laughter. Just as
it is when we watch Mr. Punch beating up Judy. Except that that is
just a bit of harmless fun at the seaside.
IVAN
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