RE: Time for a change?
Intriguing post.
In the late-referendum panic, the Westminster mob really put the cat amongst the pigeons with the 'devo max' pledge. It was a last gasp effort to buy off the undecided Scots and -- given the demographic split of the outcome -- it is not one from which they can artfully retreat.
It then begs the question: What about Wales and Northern Ireland? And indeed, what about England? I would go even further and say, what about London?
In fact, leaving aside emotion, patriotism, history and nationalism, there is -- in strictly hardheaded economic and pragmatic terms -- more logic and greater benefit to all in extending devolution to London than to any of the home nations. London is a completely different animal to the rest of the country. Different needs, different challenges, different opportunities. London has more in common with Shanghai, New York, Moscow and Singapore than it does with Birmingham, Manchester, Newcastle and Leeds.
Does it really make sense to define laws on planning, council tax, business rates, transport, environment, etc. consistently across England, when it has an elephant in the room called London? I think everyone would benefit, within and outside London, if the capital was treated differently. Not preferentially, mind you. Just differently.
That tangent aside, in his cackhanded attempt at walking back the Devo Max pledge, David Milibland did say one interesting thing. He proposed a "constitutional convention" in 2015 to look at the UK constitution in a root-and-branch way. That might be a good thing. Then again, the UK constitution -- such as it is and unlike the heavily codified American one -- is a heaving body of law that has evolved (and continues to evolve) through an uninterrupted tradition that dates back to Magna Carta. Through better and worse, it made us a formidable European power, a more-or-less just society, a global empire, an innovator, inventor and industrialist, and it saw us through wars and depressions, Thatcher and Blair.
It takes a brave and enlightened group of men to mess with that. There is a great risk of killing the patient to cure the disease. So many perverse and unintended consequences that can come from that. And I wouldn't trust the current crop of politicians in Westminster to fix a car, let along the constitution. They seem to lack the intellectual firepower, the vision or the gravitas to have a discussion like that. Their every move seems geared to the next election, if not the next big donation. I would sooner wait until someone comes along who is genuinely up to the task; whether it take 5 years, 25 or 100.
In the meantime, let's not throw away the system that got us this far in the frail hope that puny little children like Cameron, Clegg and Miliband are somehow the men that providence has chosen to better it. They aren't. Let's wait for the next batch. Or maybe the one after that...
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