As Tony Benn pointed out,
the Royal Prerogative is the undemocratic heart of our Constitution
When I first heard that Boris Johnson was going to
rule without what he considers the unnecessary interference of parliament my
first thoughts were that this is what happens when I go away for a short break!
We live in interesting times and no more so for the
Royal Family and the Queen. Not since the death of Princess Diana, which was at
first a relief to ‘the firm’, have the Royals been in the firing line. This has
not been a good week for them First
there was the little local difficulty of her son Prince Andrew and his
association with Jeff Epstein, a convicted paedophile and his almost certain
sexual relations with girls being held in conditions of captivity and now the
suspension of parliament
Her Majesty has consented to preventing Parliament
meeting in order to discuss the major constitutional issue of the time. There
can be no doubt that the Queen could have told Johnson to go away and secure
the assent of Parliament to its own dissolution. She didn’t because clearly
Johnson has no majority for such an undemocratic manoeuvre. He has been elected
by the members of the Tory party only and lacks a majority in the House of
Commons.
Thus we see that the Monarchy represents the undemocratic
heart of our constitutional settlement and the Royal Prerogative is its
instrument. It could however backfire badly on Boris for a very simple
reason. Brexit no longer commands a
majority amongst the British people and that is why there is such resolute opposition
among the Brexiteers to a second referendum or Parliament having a vote. There is certainly no support for no deal.
We saw today that there is mass anger at what has
happened and it is likely to grow not diminish. Boris Johnson’s plummy public
school accent and that of the 18th century caricature Rees-Mogg
cannot hide the deviousness and dishonesty behind this dictatorial act.
It is right that people should besiege parliament
and Downing Street and it would be right if they riot because riots are how the
peoples’ will can be manifested.
Parliament, if it has the will, can easily pass legislation
taking control over the legislative process, revoking Article 50, agreeing to a
referendum or seeking an extension to Article 50. Where there is a will there is a way. That will mean the smaller parties falling in behind Labour including the treacherous Lib Dems, who found no difficulty
sitting in the same cabinet as George Osborne and Cameron but object to Jeremy
Corbyn.
Boris Johnson may have bitten off more than he can
chew and the resignation of Ruth Davidson is an omen of the deep split in our ruling
class.
Tony Greenstein
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