For democrats on
both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, this has been a good week. And Lord knows, we
haven’t had many of those over the past few months.
When I say
democrats, by the way, I mean both democrats with a small d and Democrats with
a capital D. So let’s take them one by one.
First, the small d
democrats at Westminster who still believe in the old-fashioned theory that
parliament’s job is to hold the executive to account. Thanks to eleven
principled Conservative rebels, that is exactly what the House of Commons did
on Wednesday night, when MPs defeated the government on its Brexit bill.
Irony of ironies,
it was the threat of Tory rebellions that spooked David Cameron into his in-out
referendum promise in the first place – and now it’s a Tory rebellion that
throws a spanner in the works as Theresa May tries to fudge her way out of the
mess he gaily left behind.
(I was tempted to
say the rebels had thrown a Spaniard in the works, which is the name of a book
of nonsense published by John Lennon in 1965, but in the context of Brexit, it
doesn’t seem entirely appropriate.)
The fact that the
former attorney-general Dominic Grieve, who was the architect of the amendment
that defeated Mrs May, and who is by common consent one of the most decent MPs
at Westminster, has now been receiving death threats tells us something truly
unpleasant about the more extremist elements who have bubbled up out of the
Brexit mud.
And yes, I include
the Daily Mail, whose front page on
Thursday, adorned with mug shots of all eleven Tory rebels and the headline ‘Proud
of yourselves?’, was shameful even by that paper’s own shameful standards.
Mrs May told EU
leaders in Brussels that despite her Commons defeat, she is ‘still in control’.
I call that Fake News – because it’s parliament that’s in control, which is
exactly as it should be. Not that this week’s vote will make much real
difference to the eventual outcome, but it has at least served to remind this
panicky, weak government that we do still live in a parliamentary democracy, in
which parliament is sovereign.
You might even say
that it has taken back control – which is, of course, exactly what the Leave
campaigners insisted they wanted all along.
So what about the
capital D Democrats on the other side of the Pond? It may not be easy if you do
not share my obsessive interest in US politics to fathom the seismic nature of
this week’s Senate election in Alabama, so here’s a reminder from yesteryear:
this is the state where the ‘segregation for ever’ former governor, George
Wallace, won a massive sixty-five per cent of the vote when he ran for President in 1968.
The election this
week of Doug Jones was the first time for twenty-five years that the state has
elected a Democratic Party senator, and it was, according to the Washington Post, a ‘stunning set-back
for the Republican party’.
What it means is
that it will be even more difficult for Donald Trump to get any of his legislative
proposals through the US Senate, which is now split between 51 Republicans and
49 Democrats. It also means that Democrats – and democrats – have seen that it
is perfectly possible to defeat bigotry, ignorance and the ugliest form of extreme
demagoguery.
(The Republican
candidate Roy Moore believes homosexuality should be illegal and that ‘abortion,
sodomy and materialism have taken the place of life, liberty and the pursuit of
happiness.’ He is also alleged to have sexually assaulted several young women
and a 14-year-old girl, allegations that he has denied.)
I admit it’s not
all good news. The appalling Mr Moore may have lost the election, but he still
won 48.4% of the vote. The Democrat Doug Jones won only because 95% of
Alabama’s African-American voters backed him, compared to a mere 27% of whites.
For me, the lesson
is simply this: whether it’s Donald Trump or the hardest of hard Brexiteers,
nothing is inevitable. They can be defeated, by honest men and women casting
their votes according to their conscience. Of course, there will be more setbacks,
for both democrats and Democrats, but the worst mistake they could make is to
give in to despair.
Mr Trump will not
be in the White House for ever, and the Johnson-Gove Tendency in the Tory party
will not run rampant for ever. Democratic checks and balances were put in place
for a reason – and this week we saw them in action.
2 comments:
Another terrific view on the recent events. More power to the honest women and men with a conscience. I am betting there will be much to exasperate us, at home and away, and more to fuel our obsession with U.S. politics in the year to come.
Merry Christmas and A Happy New year to you too.
The truly scary aspect of the Brexit Bill vote was that most of the 305 MPs voted as they were ordered/persuaded/forced rather than because they represent their constituencies
Not much better on the other side, mind
The Brexit situation is the biggest constitutional crisis for 45 years, the result of a very marginal public opinion poll, and our elected MPs simply do as they're told
The phrase "We were only obeying orders" springs to mind
JW
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