“Does Magna Carta mean
nothing to you? Did she die in vain?” pleaded Tony Hancock in
an episode of Hancock’s Half Hour
(titled, topically at the time, Twelve
Angry Men). Well, Magna Carta means something to Young Dave, because he’s putting
it at the centrepiece of his magnificently empty rhetoric about British
Values, in the wake of the Trojan Horse plot, which still wasn’t a plot.
“This week there has
been a big debate about British values ... I’m clear about what these
values are – and I’m equally clear that they should be promoted in every school
and to every child in our country ... a belief in freedom, tolerance of
others, accepting personal and social responsibility, respecting and upholding
the rule of law – are the things we should try to live by every day”. Jolly good sheow!
Then Cameron gets on to a slightly stickier track: “Our freedom doesn’t come from thin air. It
is rooted in our parliamentary democracy and free press. Our sense of
responsibility and the rule of law is attached to our courts and independent
judiciary. Our belief in tolerance was won through struggle and is linked to
the various churches and faith groups that have come to call Britain home”.
At this point, the bullshit detector sounded long and loud.
There are all kinds of glaring flaws in the PM’s argument – Owen Jones has an
interesting personal angle on them HERE
– but, for me, Cameron is in serious trouble when he sounds off about “parliamentary democracy and a free press”,
especially in the year when we commemorate 100 years since the start of The
Great War.
World War 1 was the last war when the ruling class, by
whatever means, caused the working man to do their bidding, which all too often
meant being slaughtered in their hundreds of thousands under the leadership of
staggeringly incompetent leaders like Douglas Haig (who was, in his own
retelling, a hero). The overwhelming majority of ordinary soldiers from the UK
did not even have the vote.
“Parliamentary
democracy”? Only after so many had been sacrificed was the property
qualification removed, and all men over 21 enfranchised. Women had to wait
until 1929 to see all their voices heard at a General Election. “Tolerance”? The Tories opposed legislation
like the Race Relations Acts tooth and nail – the last of these was passed into
law just 38 years ago.
“Free press”? The
only significant newspapers not under the control of Rupert Murdoch, Lord
Rothermere, the Barclay Brothers, Richard Desmond or Evgeny Lebedev are the Mirror titles, and Guardian Media Group.
That’s not so free. And that not so free press wastes no time beating up on,
and seeking to influence, that “Independent
Judiciary”. Or has Dave forgotten the Leveson Inquiry already?
By all means talk about British values. But let us be honest about it.
3 comments:
"respecting and upholding the rule of law – are the things we should try to live by every day"
That might be easier to promote if only those at the top of the social, economic, political & law enforcement ladders showed a good example - sadly lacking at present.
"respecting and upholding the rule of law – are the things we should try to live by every day"
UKIP Cheshire East to note....
Always amuses me when they prattle on about the tradition of democracy. One of my uncles was 29 before he could vote, and my grandmother almost picked up her pension before she could vote.
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