Like the Police, or the education system, or the BBC, or anything else that is alleged to have become “politicised”, the monarchy has always been political, since, like each of those, the very concept of it is profoundly political. The question is whose politics. We ought not to be seeking to abolish the Royal Prerogative, but to exercise it. The whole of it, no matter to which committee or self-perpetuating oligarchy any part of it might have been surrendered. All of it must be taken back, and in most cases that would be perfectly simple to do.
Previous Governments have handed over jaw-dropping amounts of power to the Deep State, having of course been installed for the purpose. These people clearly never wanted to run the country. Again, that was why they were put in by the people who did. For example, while each generation presumably produces an obvious Astronomer Royal, why hand over the power to appoint Regius Professors, or certain Oxbridge Heads of House, or the Poet Laureate? Never mind the judiciary? Or 26 members of Parliament? And how entitled is the Liberal Establishment in the Church of England, to assume the right to appoint those 26 legislators over the rest of us?
But those powers have never been legislated away. Almost nothing in Britain ever is quite abolished or repealed. It falls into prolonged desuetude, but it is still there. Jeremy Corbyn would have made full use of the Royal Prerogative; there are no republicans in possession of the powers of a Medieval monarch. Disgracing Eton and Oxford, Boris Johnson also showed tendencies in that direction. So the Deep State had to get rid of the pair of them. It has done so, even before either of them could turn his attention to reversing the statutory surrender of control over monetary policy. Lest Rishi Sunak and Jeremy Hunt show any tendencies in that direction, then the Deep State has ensured that it has the shallow Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves to fall back on.
Thankfully, the opinion polls bear no resemblance to real votes cast, and even the Labour poll lead has halved since Sunak took over. Halved. The Labour vote has gone through the floor at all but one by-election since Keir Starmer became Leader, with one of those recording Labour’s lowest ever share of the vote. Council seats that were held or won under Corbyn have fallen like sandcastles, taking control of major local authorities with them. That is the bread and butter of the party’s right wing, who are not otherwise the most employable of people.
With nearly two years still to go until the next General Election, Starmer’s personal rating is negative not only nationally, but in every region apart from London, and it is still in decline. Starmer’s dishonesty is becoming a story. He lied to his party members to get their votes, so he would lie to anyone else to get their votes. We are heading for a hung Parliament. To strengthen families and communities by securing economic equality and international peace through the democratic political control of the means to those ends, including national and parliamentary sovereignty, we need to hold the balance of power. Owing nothing to either main party, we must be open to the better offer. There does, however, need to be a better offer. Not a lesser evil, which in any case the Labour Party is not.
The DUP now think they are more British than the King Of England. The English Tory party always sell out the Unionists. Just look at the record Sunningdale the Anglo-Irish Agreement Downing Street Declaration and the Framework Document. A United Ireland may be Labour Party policy but it will be English Tories who will deliver it
ReplyDeleteIt has not been Labour Party policy in nearly 30 years. But yes, when it happens, then it will be the Tories who do it.
DeleteThe question is whose politics
ReplyDeleteThat is nonsense. The BBC is funded by a tax on every household in Britain specifically on the basis of remaining politically impartial. Otherwise it should subject itself to market forces like the Spectator or Daily Mail, and see who’d voluntarily pay for it,
And every word of that comment is as political as it gets.
DeleteThere is no such thing as political impartiality.
there are no republicans in possession of the powers of a Medieval monarch. Disgracing Eton and Oxford, Boris Johnson also showed tendencies in that direction.
ReplyDeleteWhat “tendencies in that direction”? As I’ve explained to you, that is Remainer crap. Prorogation is a perfectly proper Parliamentary procedure and no government can do it permanently, since it has to recall Parliament to levy taxes or have an Armed Forces.
When you consider time out for conference season at that time of year, he prorogued Parliament for a mere 11 extra days.
Pavlov's dog again.
DeleteCan you read English?
And every word of that comment is as political as it gets.
ReplyDeleteThere is no such thing as political impartiality
No it isn’t. If the BBC is compulsorily funded by everybody in the country regardless of political creed, then it should not take political sides, as its Royal Charter requires.
You still don't see it. That is positively picturesque.
Delete