Posts Tagged 'Nick Clegg'

Government proposals actually increase proportion of unelected, C of E Bishops in Lords

View of the House of Lords Chamber in the Pala...

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The Government’s proposal to retain 12 reserved seats for Church of England Bishops would actually mean an increase proportionately of the presence of Bishops in the House of Lords. Keeping any reserved seats for the Bishops would be an affront to democracy and antithetical to the aims of a fairer and more egalitarian parliament, the British Humanist Association (BHA) has claimed.

The Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg set out the Government’s plans in a statement to the House of Commons from 15.30 on Tuesday 17 May. The Government’s proposals include a significant reduction in membership of the chamber, from nearly 800 at present to 300, and between 80-100% elected and the remaining appointed. At present, 26 Bishops of the Church of England are entitled to sit in the House of Lords as of right; the only such example of clergy holding automatic membership of a legislature in a modern democracy.

At present, Bishops make up 3% of the House of Lords. Under the Government’s proposals that would increase to 4%. Reducing the number of reserved seats for Bishops from 26 to 12 would actually increase their presence proportionately in the chamber.

BHA Chief Executive Andrew Copson has commented as follows (and I wholeheartedly agree):

‘The presence of unelected prelates is an anomaly within our system of government, and their retention, even in diminished numbers, would be an indefensible affront to democratic principles. In no other legislative chamber are elected or appointed representatives deemed so insufficiently qualified to deal with matters of belief and morality that they require supplementing by clergy.  Retaining the Lords Spiritual and actually increasing their presence proportionately is completely at odds with the aspiration of a more legitimate and representative second chamber.’

A 2010 ICM poll found that 74% of people think it is ‘wrong’ for Bishops to be given an automatic seat in the Lords, and that 48% said that it was not important for Church of England Bishops to have a role in the Lords. The poll questioned over 1,000 people from different backgrounds.

Wall to Wall Populism now Complete

Ed Miliband, British politician and Secretary ...

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With Ed Milband’s election as Labour leader we now have a full complement of political leaders in the UK that put populism much higher up the pecking order of political attributes than substance, ideology or inalienable values.

Miliband, yet another Oxford PPE graduate, and yet another political leader who has been isolated from any real work or any real hardship, has been propelled to Labour leadership, usurping his own brother in the process.

Now the Primrose Hill set is complete – and the only thing that makes them different is the nature of the dinner party conversations and guests. The wine, no doubt, is equally fine.

British politics has been reduced to the esoteric and the hypothetical. Ed Miliband is only hypothetically socialist – just as David Cameron and Nick Clegg are hypothetically Conservative and Liberal. But what unites them is a focus on the peripheral argument, the nuanced debate, the incremental improvement. Politics, these days, is the politics of argumentative geekdom, devoid of any passion or belief.

One exchange between the brothers Miliband illustrates this wonderfully. During the leadership campaign Ed apparently said to David, “How can you possibly say you’re going to stand on every aspect of our manifesto? We lost the election.” A fair point? Well, no, because Ed wrote that manifesto.

In short, Ed Miliband will dump even his own manifesto commitments, his own articulated policy logic, if they prove to be unpopular.

Unlike his own father who refused to have anything to do with the Labour Party when it apparently dumped any commitment to socialism, Ed Miliband is a breed apart from the voting public. He is the creation of the political mould that regards ideological commitment as a form of intellectual slavery.

PS – I know this is childish and rather barrel-scraping, but is it me or does Ed bear a striking resemblance to Gromit from Wallace and Gromit fame?


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Musings on things political and secular…

This is my site where I share my world views for anyone who might be remotely interested. Visit only if you think the content is interesting. Oh and comment is free. So go right ahead and agree or disagree. But, please, be kind and polite (especially to me).
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