Demonstrating why he never joined the Lib Dems, David Owen writes:
In September 2014 the Scottish independence referendum
brought the United Kingdom perilously close to splitting apart.
From that moment
on those elements that we share, that help create a sense of common purpose
need to become ever more precious as we try to unify our nation.
As always, constitutional change should be evolutionary and
never more so than for that complex and flexible instrument of our democracy,
the House of Commons.
It must also, even in the shadow of the referendum in
Scotland, go with the grain of English nature.
I detect no wish for a separate
English parliament, nor for regional government in England. But there is an
English dimension which those of us whose origins are from other parts of the
UK must respect.
The tragedy of today is that our Prime Minister, David
Cameron, cannot seem to embrace the broadminded generosity of spirit that
almost all of his predecessors have been able to summon up.
Ours is at this moment in our history a hesitant and
fragile Union. We all need to respect and value, whatever political parties we
support, those elements which bind the citizens of the UK together.
David
Cameron needs to understand that to play the ‘English card’ on Scottish
devolution in the way he did outside 10 Downing Street on the day after the
Scottish referendum vote was a grave mistake which has already had far-reaching
constitutional consequences.
He has started to do this again in
his depiction of the SNP MPs likely to be elected in large numbers to the House
of Commons as an illegitimate force merely because they advocate separation
through the democratic mechanism of another referendum.
The former Conservative
Secretary of State for Scotland, Michael Forsyth, taking a different angle was
correct to warn David Cameron against
bolstering the SNP chances over Labour as “a short-term and dangerous
view.”
These issues are too serious for ‘Flashman’ politics and Ed
Miliband is wise to adopt a longer term and steadier view.
The closest analogy I can find to such irresponsible
behaviour on the Constitution is when David Lloyd George on 5 December 1921
infamously threatened “war within three days”, if all the members of the Irish
delegation did not sign the Anglo-Irish Treaty.
It was, as it turned out, a
very dangerous bluff. At 2.20 a.m. the treaty was signed but not by all.
Lord
Birkenhead in the British government delegation commented, ‘I may have signed
my political death warrant,’ to which Michael Collins, leading the Irish
delegation, perceptively replied, ‘I may have signed my actual death warrant.’
Lloyd George’s intervention when revealed to the Dáil damaged Collins and
though the vote went through it was despite of not because of it.
Collins was at
that stage despite Éamon de Valera’s opposition recognised as a brave
farsighted man. Weakening him was weakening the Union.
Cameron should
learn this lesson from history: holding the UK together is still a task that
requires courage, holding to the long view.
We need elements other than the most obvious one of the
defence of the realm to bind the UK together and even on defence in relation to
Trident, there are deep differences that need addressing.
The aftermath of the
referendum in Scotland has not lifted the threat of separation but given the UK
a little more time to achieve the correct balance between its constituent
parts.
David Cameron, as Prime Minister, must also take the main
responsibility for deceiving the people over the Health and Social Care Act
2012 and the incompetent implementation of that legislation.
Cameron told NHS audiences – the royal colleges of surgeons,
nurses and pathologists among others – throughout 2009 that “there will be no
more of these pointless re-organisations that aim for change but instead bring
chaos”.
Or that “we will not persist with the top-down restructures and reorganisations
of the NHS that have dominated the last decade in the NHS”, causing “terrible
disruption, demoralisation and waste”.
Vain attempts have been made since to
claim the 2012 legislation as being “bottom up” but these were soon shown to be
demonstrably false.
The major consequence of the 2012 Health and Social Care
Act has been how it views health care in England as a business rather than a
service.
Along with Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have retained an
undoubtedly recognisable NHS, albeit in slightly different forms.
Only in
England does the threat exist that the NHS will be unrecognisable by 2020 if
the 2012 legislation is not repealed in substance after the May 2015 general
election.
This has profound implications for the UK for the underlying reasons
that make the original concept of the NHS worth fighting for are clear, but not
often stated, perhaps because they go to the ethical and moral basis of the way
many UK citizens wish to live their lives.
In this general election there is a settled wish emerging
from the great bulk of voters for the original NHS to be available in all parts
of the UK in a recognisable form. It would be a unifying theme for the next UK
government to reinstate the NHS, at a time when the UK needs to revive a sense
of unity.
There is another aspect to the Scottish referendum, the
wish it has inspired for England to devolve more decisions to its bigger
cities: London, Birmingham, Manchester, Leeds, Liverpool and Newcastle.
In part
this follows the success story of the gradual introduction of powerful mayors [well, that is debatable].
There is a strong case for considering a strategic health and caring role for
such cities.
It would need to be introduced carefully on the basis of proven
experience, not all happening at once, and would stem from a well-considered
proposal from a city put to the Secretary of State for Health, who would have
the enabling power to introduce it.
Constitutional changes in a democracy usually are the
result of political trade-offs and changes for Scotland impact on Wales and
Northern Ireland and of course by far the largest component of the UK, England.
Two other vital reforms could reinforce the structure of UK
unity.
First, an elected Senate representing the four elements of the UK. The
House of Lords has become an absurdity in size and composition. It reeks of
patronage.
The second reform comes from the McKay Commission on the consequences of devolution
published in March 2013.
They propose that “decisions at the United
Kingdom level with a separate and distinct effect for England (or for England
and Wales) should normally be taken only with the consent of a majority of MPs for
constituencies in England (or England and Wales)” while ensuring that “the
right of the House of Commons as a whole to make the final decision should
remain”.
They have carved out a mechanism allowing that some English
legislation would not have to be part of the normal procedure on all occasions.
The commissioners assert: “We would expect departures from the norm to occur
only rarely in practice” and “The apparent fragility of the declaratory
resolution approach can also be seen as flexibility. A government, after
consideration, may decide that it is necessary in the interests of the UK as a
whole, or an affected part of it, to invoke the exception implicit in the word
‘normally”.
The report preserves the present position in the House of
Commons that there should not be two different kinds of MPs, so all MPs would
vote on whether to grant a second reading for all Bills and finally whether a
Bill should become law with a single vote on third reading.
If some English legislation
has from time to time so great an implication for the UK as a whole that it
does not fit with only English MPs amending it at committee and report stages,
then Parliament can decide to make it UK legislation.
NHS reinstatement legislation in 2015 will be a classic
case of the sort of legislative exception that the McKay commissioners had in
mind.
Ed Miliband should indicate in advance during this election that he would
so regard it.
He should also indicate that he would not endorse legislation for
another referendum as Prime Minister of the UK in the lifetime of the next
Parliament.
The social history of the NHS makes clear that it would be
‘an error to regard the NHS as a spontaneous creation’.
The cumbersome National
Health Insurance (NHI) administration established in 1911 supplied minimum
financial relief during sickness and a ‘panel doctor’ service for the low paid
on the basis of weekly deductions of income for the so-called health stamp.
But
many were not covered by this insurance. There was nothing for those excluded
other than the charity of the doctor or a hospital.
The Dawson report of 1920
pointed the way but many slum dwellers had totally inadequate healthcare, if
any, and lived in conditions of Dickensian squalor.
The Second World War
brought the Emergency Medical Service, the Beveridge report and the 1944 White
Paper outlining the provisions of the projected NHS: a resolve emerged in
wartime within the British people that when peace came there would be a
different and better system of healthcare for everyone.
At the heart of all marketisation and commercialisation of
the NHS, David Marquand has written, lies the “totemic term “choice”: free
choice by unconnected individuals, satisfying individual wants through market
competition”.
Healthcare, whether public or private, in a very real sense is
infinite: money can be – and in many countries is – poured into healthcare by
those who can afford it.
Money for the NHS is a public choice, but it is all
relative to what we choose to spend on education, housing, welfare, defence,
all legitimate demands.
Healthcare, if publicly provided, inevitably has to be
constrained.
That rationing process within the NHS is flexible, professional
and democratically accountable. It is decided by Parliament through the
Chancellor of the Exchequer, the Secretary of State for Health and Cabinet.
By
democratic choice it is not done by a market or by insurance premiums or an
appointed QUANGO like NHS England.
Voters could have chosen a different system – they exist in
many parts of the world – but no major political party has ever felt brave or
foolish enough to put that choice to them.
It was not a choice put to the
electorate in 2010 by either the Conservatives or Liberal Democrats.
Both
parties are fudging this choice again in 2015 though at least now the Liberal
Democrats have admitted some changes are needed to the existing
legislation.
Politics cannot be an ideology-free zone but it should not
resound with zealotry. No one should be Prime Minister for England alone.
We
saw in the Scottish referendum how powerful a vote swinger the NHS became in
the closing stages of the campaign.
Despite the fact that health is fully
devolved to the Scottish Parliament, the spectre of an English-controlled
Treasury being able to use financial allocations to bring marketisation to
Scotland's NHS carried sufficient weight with voters that the ‘yes’ campaign
exploited it and the ‘no’ campaign feared it.
It also served to remind some
voters, not just in Scotland, that the NHS as we have known it since 1948 was
under threat.
The English voters in this General Election are becoming evermore
aware of this threat in England.
Before 7 May 2015 many MPs and candidates – Conservative,
Labour, Liberal Democrat, Ukip, Green, SNP, Plaid Cymru – will be
systematically challenged to indicate whether they will support the NHS
Reinstatement Bill in England.
In Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland,
candidates are being urged to commit to vote, if elected as an MP, for
reinstatement of the NHS in England.
Allow marketisation and commercialisation
to continue in England and it will not be long before it affects the NHS
throughout the United Kingdom.
The NHS in one part of the UK means the NHS in
all of the UK.
They will never be exactly the same for they are part of
devolved government but they need to be inextricably linked in a truly united
UK.
The end of the NHS as we have known and understood it in
England will take place before 2020 if whichever party or parties that win the
2015 general election does not change the 2012 NHS legislation.
Social
historians may not be agreed as to when the exact moment of its passing will
be.
As endings go, it will be, in the words of T. S. Eliot, “not with a bang
but a whimper” and around that moment the issue of Scottish independence will
be back on the political agenda with a vengeance.
The two are linked in more
ways than have yet been fully recognised.
The NHS is not a religion, as
it has been likened to, nor is it the preserve of one political party, nor one
country within our United Kingdom.
It belongs to all of us.
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