The television coverage which we generally
see from the House of Commons can be very misleading. On the whole, it’s quite a friendly place; and
most clauses in most legislation are entirely uncontroversial. The coverage that we see concentrates on the
areas of difference rather than of agreement; difference is more newsworthy than
agreement, and it makes for better television as well. There are a great number of cross-party
friendships – indeed, over the years it has often seemed to me that MPs act,
and maybe think, as though they have more in common with each other than they
do with the rest of us. For all the
rhetoric and vitriol in the chamber itself, the MPs play together in the
various parliamentary sports teams, eat together, and above all, drink
together.
That may be why the PM genuinely seems to
believe in relation to Brexit that if only we can ‘get it done’ the country can
come together again. It’s a belief
(insofar as he believes it – I mostly wonder whether he believes anything he
says) which is entirely in line with normal parliamentary procedure. In the case of Brexit, however, it’s a major
category error, and it ignores the extent to which the debate around this issue
extends well beyond the boundaries of the parliamentary estate. Just occasionally our parliamentarians are
asked to take decisions which are not just about comparatively minor details of
legislation which can easily be reversed in the next parliament, but about issues
which will change the direction of the future for a generation or more. Brexit is such an issue.
It’s not just some sort of giant game at
the end of which both sides line up, shake each other’s hands, and wander off
to the club for a drink or two. For
those who care passionately about the sort of future we are going to leave for
our children and their children, it isn’t a game which ends with everyone
accepting the score-line and quietly acquiescing. And that’s a factor which applies to both
sides. Just as Farage made it clear
(entirely properly) before the referendum that if his side narrowly lost, the issue
wouldn’t go away, equally those who believe that the future of Wales (or the
UK, depending on one’s personal focus) lies in a European context aren’t going
to simply go away and accept an insular or US-dominated future either. There are non-Brexit parallels as well –
supporters of devolution didn’t simply give up the battle after the 1979
referendums, and supporters of an independent Scotland haven’t simply given up
after the result of the 2014 referendum.
And why should they?
Those who argue that such arguments can
somehow be ‘settled’ by a vote in the House of Commons – or even by another
referendum – are failing to understand the significance of the issue under
debate. It wasn’t the referendum which
caused the polarisation of opinion amongst the population; the difference in
opinion existed beforehand, especially within the ruling party itself, which is
why we had a referendum in the first place.
The way it was fought and the way in which things have turned out since
may have exacerbated the division and hardened opinions on both sides, but it
didn’t create those divisions. Agreement
by the House of Commons on the terms of departure won’t change the opinions of
those who believe that it’s the wrong decision, and another referendum won’t
change the minds of those who choose to see the EU as some sort of evil empire
either.
There really is no good way out of the
hole into which we have collectively been led, and there is no mechanism for
bringing people together, no matter how often the PM claims that a decisive
victory for his side of the debate achieves precisely that. As far as the next week is concerned, imprisoning
the PM for contempt of court might please some; agreeing the terms of a deal
might please others; yet others will be delighted to get one hurdle out of the
way so that they can pursue their dream of what they call a ‘complete break’. There is nothing that will please all of
those groups, and nothing which will put an end to the argument. This one will, as they say, run and run.
1 comment:
... and run.
The atmosphere in the run-up to the referendum reminded me forcibly of those months before Gŵyl Ddewi 1979. It took the Thatcher years to make *some* of the George Thomas school of thought change their minds. My earnest hope is that people will come to their senses a lot quicker this time round.
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