Where there's a Wills there's a way
John Jackson (London, Unlock Democracy): Many political
commentators are enjoying great sport by sniffing out and pursuing members of
the presently besieged government who smell like attractive quarry. With
increasing frequency the victims deserve this attention because of incaution,
stupidity or breaking cover at the wrong time.
It is rare for a minister to attract praise for doing something rather
brave. One such should be Michael Wills at the Ministry of Justice responsible
for the discussion paper "A national framework for greater citizen engagement" (pdf).
I have just reread
Wills' paper "A New Agenda-Labour and Democracy" written when he was a
backbencher and published by the Institute for Public Policy Research in June 2006. In the introduction he says
"This essay argues for a programme of reform, that may have to be driven not by
the political class who are seen as responsible for undermining faith in our
constitutional arrangements but by the people themselves who are served by such
arrangements. It suggests that the time may be coming for an elected, one-off,
fixed term constitutional convention to heal the fracture in our politics".
It is easy to
contrast that imaginative idea, set out in clear and refreshingly honest words,
with the caution, correctness and need not to be too costly pervading the ideas
outlined in the discussion paper and either damn Wills as a cowardly backslider
with faint praise or dismiss him as someone of no consequence with caustic
snidery. It would be wrong and unfair to do either.
It has long been
clear that many, if not most, of Wills' parliamentary colleagues (of all
parties) take fright at the implications of admitting a significant degree of
deliberative democracy into our constitutional arrangements. It threatens their
power base so often defended by reference to the supposed sanctity of
parliamentary sovereignty. The political parties which under our present
arrangements wield so much unaccountable power are far from enamoured of the
idea either for obvious reasons of self interest. They will kill it if they
can. The media tend to regard the notion as of no political merit because it is
(they say) of little interest to the average voter who is concerned most with
what hits their pocket. And the suspicion that the Civil Service instinctively
tries to kill any attempt to remove influence from their base in Whitehall is well
founded.
Against that
background, and at a time in which the Opposition is seeking political
advantage by sniping at any proposal that can be presented as unnecessarily
costing the taxpayer money and Labour MPs with small majorities (of which Wills
himself is one) are terrified of any ministerial proposal which might not play
well with the media and the voters nearer the bottom of the pile than the top
influenced by the media, the mere production and publication of the discussion
paper must have required belief, tenacity and considerable political courage.
It must also have required a more than encouraging nod from the top of the
governmental tree.
The discussion paper
itself reeks of compromise and passage through many interested hands determined
that it should suffer the fate of a worthy experiment designed to fail. Of
course deliberative democracy should complement and support the Parliamentary
process (in so far as that reflects genuine representative democracy) but what
that means to those who have tried to stop Wills is encapsulated in the
astonishing statement "Representative democracy depends on political parties
and governments getting their business through Parliament." Diane Abbot's bazaar!
Despite all that,
those of us who applauded Wills' IPPR paper in 2006 and were encouraged by the
apparent commitment of Gordon Brown to the Governance
of Britain Green Paper a year later should be thankful that the notions of
deliberative democracy and genuine respect for "we the people" are alive - just -
and on the political table. What is proposed may be a puny start with massive
vested interests lined up against it but it is a start and should be supported.
Michael Wills needs help and should get it. Well done to him for sticking to a
thankless task - and well done to Gordon Brown for supporting him.
Recent comments
1 hour 20 min ago
3 hours 11 min ago
5 hours 54 min ago
9 hours 10 min ago
13 hours 26 min ago
13 hours 42 min ago
14 hours 58 min ago
22 hours 31 min ago
23 hours 7 min ago
23 hours 50 min ago