Apparently he thinks the PM is a ‘buffoon’ – now that Sir
Alan is no longer an MP he can indulge in such un-Parliamentary language – and
many of Sir Alan’s former colleagues are also the targets of his insults.
Perhaps he might have spoken differently - at least in public - had he
succeeded in his bid for the Party leadership in 2005, or in his attempt in
2019 to invalidate Boris Johnson’s new government https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-7271967/Boris-gears-Brexit-battle-foreign-office-minister-Alan-Duncan-QUITS.html
.
However I seem to detect a certain lack of logic in his
diary reference (18 April 2017) to ‘extreme Brexiteer nutters’, presumably
meaning much of the general public rather than merely some of his colleagues.
Sir Alan served as an MP for nearly three decades, and also
as a Minister in Her Majesty’s Government. What did he think he was doing? What
did he imagine Brexit was about?
Brexit was not about restoring power to ‘the people’. We do
not usually govern ourselves by plebiscite – the Referendum was one such, but
only needed because Parliament had forgotten its duty and PM Cameron, together
with the media establishment, had been so completely out of touch with the
people.
Brexit was the reassertion, not of the public’s, but of Parliament’s
sovereignty. Lord Justice Laws, in his 2002 ruling on the appeal re ‘Thoburn
v Sunderland City Council’, said http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2002/195.html
(para. 59):
‘… there is nothing in the ECA
which allows the Court of Justice, or any other institutions of the EU, to
touch or qualify the conditions of Parliament's legislative supremacy in the
United Kingdom. Not because the legislature chose not to allow it; because by
our law it could not allow it. That being so, the legislative and judicial
institutions of the EU cannot intrude upon those conditions. The British
Parliament has not the authority to authorise any such thing. Being
sovereign, it cannot abandon its sovereignty.’ (my emphasis)
It took 30 years from our first entering the EEC to get this
clarification, and there can be little doubt that the Continental intention was
always to destroy national sovereignty by degrees; but with a great effort,
Gulliver broke the threads and sat up. We’re still picking off the fluff.
Now it may be that Sir Alan believes we should be a uni-people
governed remotely by a committee whom we do not elect and cannot reject, but I
do not see how this squares with his espousal of libertarianism. Indeed, as we
have now fallen under the control of a watered-down and so far largely
well-intentioned healthcare version of revolutionary France’s Committee Of
Public Safety, I should have been pleased to see Sir Alan’s strictures on our
sudden and almost complete loss of liberty, enforced by gendarmes keen to
overreach their already broadened powers.
Especially, I fail to understand why his roles as an MP, and
sometime British Government Minister, are consistent with a Remainer’s implicit
commitment to vitiate and ultimately abolish the sovereignty of the Crown in
Parliament.
So if he asks why I do not take him as seriously as he does,
I am tempted to give him the advice he gave to Boris Johnson: ‘Look in the
****ing mirror!’
2 comments:
You may also have experienced the disgruntled colleague who uses their retirement party as an opportunity to vent their bile over all the real and imagined slights against them.
It's not a good look, it's embarrassing for others to see, and makes acceptance of their new life more difficult. Sir Alan Duncan - meet Karma.
@DJ: spot on. And remember, these are extracts from his diaries - they reveal the texture of his thoughts. A preening yob; the Tory Party has had some right odd ones but we must be thankful it didn't choose him, at least.
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