When two honest men met in Parliament, one was shot and the other hanged. Though two centuries old, the story sheds light on current issues of democracy and government.
The date was May 11, 1812 and Prime Minister Spencer
Perceval had arrived to take part in a debate. In the lobby, John Bellingham stepped
forward and shot him at close range with a half-inch pistol ball; Perceval
staggered back, took a couple of steps forward and died immediately.
Rather than run, Bellingham identified himself as the ‘unfortunate’
perpetrator and sat down quietly, awaiting a trial that he expected to
exonerate him, for, as he later explained to the court, he had spent five years
as a victim of injustice in Russian jails while British officials had done nothing
to assist him; and on his return to England his subsequent petitions for
redress had been refused or ignored. Latterly, Perceval himself had told Bellingham
(incorrectly, it seems) that the time limit for petitions had passed. Perhaps the
fatal moment of decision came when a civil servant at the Treasury had said ‘that
I had nothing to expect, and that I was at liberty to take such steps as I
thought fit,’ which he interpreted as ‘a carte blanche from the British
government to right myself in any way I might be able to discover.’
It wasn’t even a personal grudge against Perceval. Bellingham
said that as a gentleman he had the right to exact satisfaction from any member
of the Government, as sharing collective responsibility, and would have
preferred shooting the Ambassador to Russia who had been the first to deny him
help. However, the murder was seen by others as a wider political act – there was
rejoicing in Nottingham, Leicester and Sheffield where many people saw Perceval
as a reactionary fighting against radical demands for reform. Also, a Frenchman
who witnessed Bellingham’s inevitable execution wrote four years later that the
crowd’s mindset was ‘Farewell poor man, you owe satisfaction to the offended
laws of your country, but God bless you! you have rendered an important service
to your country, you have taught ministers that they should do justice, and
grant audience when it is asked of them,’ and noted that the public subscribed
handsomely to support the financially ruined man’s widow and children.
For their part,
Parliament voted a large sum to provide for Perceval’s family; unlike so many
holders of public office past and present, the Prime Minister had neglected to
monetise his position and influence and had barely more than £100 at the bank
when he died. He seems to have been a principled man in public life and a
loving husband and father. In person, he could hardly have made a more unsuitable
target for Bellingham’s revenge.
Yet the question remains, whom should the Government serve,
and how?
The long British struggle with the autocratic power of the
Crown, leading to the rebellious barons’ Magna Carta in several versions in the
thirteenth century, then bursting out in civil war in the sixteenth as
absolutist Scots monarchy overstepped the mark, and again in the seventeenth in
fear of pan-European Catholic authoritarianism, ended with the current model of
the ‘Crown in Parliament’; but although that cat had finally been belled, its
power passed down to the office of the Prime Minister and the other Cabinet Ministers
past and present, all automatically members of the monarch’s Privy Council. We
have seen how fast the Prime Minister, the Cabinet and the Council can override
the customary liberties of the subject – the late Tony Benn warned that it could
abolish our civil rights in an afternoon, and so it has proved.
Ironically, the instrument used was not the terrifying Civil
Contingencies Act 2004 that as Lord Sumption has noted is hedged about by
stringent and frequent Parliamentary reviews (despite which, we must be
thankful that the Constitutionally inventive Mr Blair had no opportunity to use
it), but an older health Act whose provisions have been so generously reinterpreted
as to accommodate every whim of the Minister for Health. When he issues an ukase,
we must obey, and the police who used to be our local guardians of the law have
become almost a national militia to enforce (and even gold-plate) his
centralised directives.
The ease with which this happened sets a dangerous precedent
for some possible future administration with a much more radical and potentially
oppressive agenda - let us look across the Atlantic for an example of Constitutional
tinkering seemingly aimed at enabling a power-grab by the Executive. Here, now,
we have another cat that needs a bell, and it is a matter for the deepest
regret that the Opposition has failed to act adequately in probing and
challenging the wielders of power. So many in Parliament, including the present
Labour leader himself, are lawyers; have they forgotten how to cross-examine?
For whom do our MPs work?
Edmund Burke told his constituents that he represented their
interests rather than their opinions, and we see from the bitter squabbling on
social media and elsewhere how divisive an Athenian-style direct democracy could
be. The representative model suited a
time when much of the economy was local and regional and it took days to ride
to Westminster; other forms of communication were similarly slow and piecemeal.
Now, we have mass media yet are better able to judge and
vote the winner of a television talent contest than who is to be our Mayor or
Police and Crime Commissioner. In the latest elections I read the statements by
the local PCC candidates and while they all seemed to be against crime (rather
than for releasing all prisoners and sacking the entire police force) there was
precious little to convince me as to who would do the job most effectively; TV
seemed little interested in informing me about them, rather than about singers
and dancers.
There is also the issue of voter numbers. Before the 1832 Reform
Act few people had the franchise: on average, about 1,200 per constituency - famously,
the pocket borough of Old Sarum had only seven electors, themselves nominated
by the landowner since the houses where people had once lived no longer
existed. It was therefore likely that a voter would recognise the Member of
Parliament and be able to speak to him.
The average modern British constituency has over 73,000 voters
(as at the 2019 General Election.) If the Parliamentary candidate wished to address
(and listen to) them all at the same time, he/she would have to book a football
stadium; and if we reduced Parliamentary seats by 50 to 600 (as Mr Cameron and
others wished) that average would rise to over 79,000 – only Twickenham or
Wembley could cope. Even now, 16 English constituencies have more than the 90,000
voters that Wembley might accommodate (headed by the Isle of Wight at over
110,000.) How could we make our individual voice heard in that size of crowd?
The answer is that we can’t. Rather than standing for us in
Parliament, some MPs seem to think it is their duty to represent their Party to
us. Once voted in, the successful MP need not do very much (although, to be
fair, many try) to keep us contented. Disciplinary feedback is via the Party
leader’s office, unless the MP is a Minister https://www.ombudsman.org.uk/making-complaint/if-we-cant-help/members-parliament
. A 2009 court ruling http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/8025255.stm
said that there is no legal remedy if your MP ignores you. There are of course various
Codes of Conduct and the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards https://www.parliament.uk/pcs/ can
help to bring pressure, but strictly speaking Statute law will not stand with
you when you have a complaint. https://medium.com/from-mysociety/are-representatives-legally-obliged-to-reply-to-constituents-1ce79034e007
. Worse still, the Party system has become so strong that even an excellent,
very hard-working and independent-minded MP can lose his seat if he/she loses
the Party’s support, as we saw with Frank (now, deservedly, Lord) Field https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Field,_Baron_Field_of_Birkenhead#Resignation_of_the_Labour_whip
.
The new wine of integrated economics and modern communications
threatens to burst the old skin of the political system. There is much work to
do, to make the Mother of Parliaments fit for use.
3 comments:
JD comments:
I didn't know the story of Bellingham but of course the majority of political stories pass me by, they are usually remote from the lives of 'normal' people. Benn and Powell were the great constitutionalists of the sixties which was when politics was transformimg itself into 'showbusiness for ugly people'. When Benn renounced his peerage to allow him to become a Member of Parliament he forgot there might be unintended consequences; Lords Home and Hailsham followed him into the Commons, the former becoming PM. As I recall he claimed to use matchsticks to help him understand economics!
James Goldsmith had a short lived magazine called 'Now!' in the eighties and I read in one issue a proposal for MPs to be chosen at random from the public in the same way that juries are selected. It couldn't be any worse than the current system. The problem with that is it would give more power to Whitehall so what our political system needs is a revolutionary overhaul of the Civil Service. I think more than a few of our current MPs would like to do that.
John Ward's idea that power should be more local is fine in theory but if he had any experience of the local Councils he would quickly change his mind. I have worked for local Councils in building council houses and I have found that local politicians are even stupider and more corrupt than those in Westminster. Ward's idea is well intentioned but we all know the road to hell is paved with good intentions.
In our local election results I noticed that one candidate was returned to his council to continue his 30 years of 'service' on that council. That sort of thing needs to be stopped. Politics is not and should not be a career, it is a service to and for the local people. When you have done your four or five years it is time to step aside and make way for others who wish to 'serve' but in fact human nature means there will never be any ideal solution.
Ancient Athens had a special machine for the random selection process:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kleroterion
and it has been re-created:
https://news.cnrs.fr/videos/the-machine-that-selected-the-citizens-of-athens
“A 2009 court ruling http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/8025255.stm said that there is no legal remedy if your MP ignores you.”
Most interesting. And concerning.
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