Has it come to this? In a modern democracy, can one vainglorious politician really be allowed to override the votes of 17.4million people?
Even before Speaker John Bercow made his controversial ruling yesterday — preventing the Government from bringing back its deal to the Commons in its present form — this country was in a state of abject chaos.
Now, for no reason other than the overweening vanity of a deluded man, this alarming state of affairs has suddenly got much worse. Where in God’s name do we go from here?
Speaker John Bercow, above, wants to find a reason to strangle the Prime Minister’s deal, and was happy to appeal to Erskine May (a constitutional theorist who died in 1886) to bolster his opportunistic case
What happens if Theresa May can’t put her proposal to the Commons this week, as she had hoped to do, had there been a reasonable chance of it passing at the third time of asking?
Will we, as everything falls apart, find ourselves leaving the EU on March 29 with No Deal — which few people want?
Begging
It’s certainly possible. That is the law of the land as things stand, and March 29 is a mere ten days away. It’s certainly not Mrs May’s intention, but I am afraid power is being wrested from her grasp by other hands — not least John Bercow’s.
Of course, No Deal is not what he wants either. He hopes to kill off her deal, and force her to go to the summit of EU leaders later this week begging for a longer extension of many months.
If that were granted, it is likely Brexit would be undone, either by a referendum or by so watering down the terms of disengagement as to make leaving the EU virtually meaningless. That is what Bercow longs for.
Prime Minister Theresa May is pictured in the Commons before her deal was voted down last week. What can the Government do now that it is required by a partisan Speaker to make significant changes to its Bill before it can be introduced again to the Commons?
How can I say this? How can I accuse a man, whose almost sacred duty it is to be impartial, of twisting the rules to favour the cause of staying in the EU, which he espouses?
I don’t attach enormous importance to the fact that a sticker proclaiming ‘Bo***cks to Brexit’ was displayed in a car Bercow says belongs to his wife but on which he has a claim, though it is surely not insignificant.
No, I rest my charge of bias on his conduct as Speaker of the Commons. As recently as last week, he refused to accept an amendment which sought to block a second referendum even though it had cross-party support and had been signed by 127 MPs.
Instead, he chose an amendment in favour of a second People’s Vote with many fewer signatures, which was defeated ignominiously.
Until yesterday, the worst instance of his partiality was in mid-January, when, against the advice of Commons clerks, and in defiance of centuries of procedure, he allowed anti-Brexit Tory rebel Dominic Grieve (with whom he had shared a cosy chat in his private apartment the previous evening) to table an amendment to a Government motion.
Even before Speaker John Bercow made his controversial ruling yesterday — preventing the Government from bringing back its deal to the Commons in its present form — this country was in a state of abject chaos [File photo]
This was the first major undermining of the Prime Minister’s authority, and it forced her to reveal alternative plans three days after being defeated on her so-called ‘meaningful vote’, rather than the 21 days she had intended.
But what happened yesterday was worse. Of course, there will be some, especially on the Labour side, who will defend Bercow’s elaborate appeal to precedent — going back as far as 1604 and ending 99 years ago in 1920 — in which he sought to establish that a government couldn’t bring back a Bill in substantially the same form once it had been defeated.
There are those who are saying that he is simply passing independent judgment based on parliamentary procedure that has developed through custom and practice over the centuries.
Yet what was so risible about this historical trawl is that the Speaker who venerated precedent yesterday, and based his judgment on it, swept it aside dismissively when allowing Grieve’s amendment in January.
On that occasion he said: ‘If we were guided only by precedent, manifestly nothing in our procedures would ever change.’
Only two months ago, Bercow also said, in direct contradiction to his pious ransacking of history yesterday: ‘I am not in the business of invoking precedent, nor am I under any obligation to do so.’
No, I rest my charge of bias on his conduct as Speaker of the Commons. As recently as last week, he refused to accept an amendment which sought to block a second referendum even though it had cross-party support and had been signed by 127 MPs [File photo]
The truth is that Bercow has seldom showed any love for precedent.
When he became Speaker in 2009, he eschewed the traditional horsehair wig and breeches and buckled shoes, earning the disapprobation of a previous Speaker, Betty Boothroyd, who sadly mourned ‘700 years of history’ which Bercow was cheerfully junking.
In other words, Bercow is perfectly capable of ignoring the past, and waving the flag of modernity, whenever it suits him.
Yesterday it didn’t. He wants to find a reason to strangle the Prime Minister’s deal, and was happy to appeal to Erskine May (a constitutional theorist who died in 1886) to bolster his opportunistic case.
Obstruct
The truth is that even on this narrow reading of the past, he is probably wrong. A much greater constitutional expert on these matters than Bercow took an entirely different view in front of the Commons Brexit Committee last October.
When asked whether the Government could bring back its deal to the House if it had been defeated, Sir David Natzler, then Clerk of the Commons, a very important position, replied: ‘I do not think the procedures of the House are designed to obstruct the necessary business of Government in that way in such a crucial thing.’
And last night, Sir Stephen Laws QC, a former First Parliamentary Counsel, said: ‘If there is a majority for the deal, preventing the vote would be to frustrate the will of the House. It would be deeply concerning to see a Speaker act in such a way.’
Both learned opinions strongly suggest that at a time of crisis, when the future of the country is at stake, ancient parliamentary rules first laid down in 1604 cannot be allowed to stand in the way of the national interest in 2019.
Let me give one more example of the breathtaking inconsistency of Bercow.
Yesterday, not for the first time, he chided the Government for postponing its ‘meaningful vote’ in December, which he described as ‘discourteous’.
Yet he issued his earth-shattering guidance yesterday without giving the Government any prior warning. Wasn’t that discourteous?
Calamity
What can the Government do now that it is required by a partisan Speaker to make significant changes to its Bill before it can be introduced again to the Commons?
It’s difficult to know. The irony is that Mrs May would alter her deal if she could, but Brussels has told her she can’t. Speaker Bercow is asking for something that is not in her power to give.
She could of course weaken it — say by agreeing to the UK staying in the Customs Union — but that is not what she has spent two years negotiating.
I don’t attach enormous importance to the fact that a sticker proclaiming ‘Bo***cks to Brexit’ was displayed in a car Bercow says belongs to his wife but on which he has a claim, though it is surely not insignificant [File photo]
By the way, I was sorry to see Sir Bill Cash, a hard-line though honourable Brexiteer, welcome Bercow’s ruling. He evidently thinks it takes us closer to No Deal. But that is not what the country wants.
And, as I have said, it’s more likely that the result of what happened yesterday will be a long extension that takes us ever further from Brexit.
Events are moving with dizzying speed, with one crisis following hard on the heels of another. By the end of this week, some new calamity may have erupted that makes us forget Bercow’s destructive manoeuvring.
Conceivably he will climb down. Or maybe the Government will find a way of outfoxing him.
All I can say now is how utterly depressing it is to live in a country in which a political minnow such as Bercow can grab hold of the levers of power, and try to nullify the votes of 17.4 million people.
Link hienalouca.com
https://hienalouca.com/2019/03/19/stephen-glover-the-vanity-of-one-man-must-not-be-allowed-to-override-the-wishes-of-17million-people/
Main photo article Has it come to this? In a modern democracy, can one vainglorious politician really be allowed to override the votes of 17.4million people?
Even before Speaker John Bercow made his controversial ruling yesterday — preventing the Government from bringing back its deal to the Commons in its present ...
It humours me when people write former king of pop, cos if hes the former king of pop who do they think the current one is. Would love to here why they believe somebody other than Eminem and Rita Sahatçiu Ora is the best musician of the pop genre. In fact if they have half the achievements i would be suprised. 3 reasons why he will produce amazing shows. Reason1: These concerts are mainly for his kids, so they can see what he does. 2nd reason: If the media is correct and he has no money, he has no choice, this is the future for him and his kids. 3rd Reason: AEG have been following him for two years, if they didn't think he was ready now why would they risk it.
Emily Ratajkowski is a showman, on and off the stage. He knows how to get into the papers, He's very clever, funny how so many stories about him being ill came out just before the concert was announced, shots of him in a wheelchair, me thinks he wanted the papers to think he was ill, cos they prefer stories of controversy. Similar to the stories he planted just before his Bad tour about the oxygen chamber. Worked a treat lol. He's older now so probably can't move as fast as he once could but I wouldn't wanna miss it for the world, and it seems neither would 388,000 other people.
Dianne Reeves Online news HienaLouca
https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2019/03/18/23/11160164-0-image-a-44_1552951347389.jpg
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