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Martin McCallion ([personal profile] devilgate) wrote2006-03-20 02:47 pm

"Pray the future will never need..."

I had hoped to be the first to coin the inevitable term, "loangate" over the recent Labour funding scandal. Not surprisingly, though, The Independent has beaten me to it.

Labour sleaze: it's real, it's here, it'll probably bring Blair down. Let's just hope he takes the corrupt & cynical ID cards bill — and more importantly, now, the Abolition of Parliament bill — with him.

Labour shouldn't be dealing in peerages at all, of course: except to abolish them. Sadly the time when Labour might possibly have abolished peerages — or even significantly democratised the upper house — seem long ago and far away, now. May 1997 seems like another time in another world. True, we knew that 'New' Labour wasn't going to be the real Labour that we wanted; but it was dawn after the long Tory night, and there was a mood of optimism in the air.

I got up on the morning after the election and put Billy Bragg records on, in celebration. Though admittedly one of the tracks was 'Ideology', which warns about the dark side of politics.

And how dark that side has turned out to be. It strikes me as slightly ironic that the Abolition of Parliament bill should be starting to come into higher visibility at the same time as the film version of V For Vendetta has just come out.





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[personal profile] zotz 2006-03-20 03:08 pm (UTC)(link)
This might be the trigger for the last push on Lords reform. I hope so, anyway. It turns out the last Queen's Speech mentioned such a Bill. Last term the Commons couldn't assemble a majority for any of seven options, one of which was for a fully elected house.

What hasn't been mentioned much is that the PM's ability to nominate life peers has been greatly reduced in the last decade, and while at the moment public opinion's ahead of the government on this one, most of the time they've been working slowly on something the general public don't give a toss about.

Now, I agree that the situation over these people is grim, but the fact that the cleanup hasn't been fast enough doesn't alter the fact that after over a century of procrastination a cleanup has finally started.

I'm right with you on the Legislative and Regulatory Reform Bill, though.