By Seth Mandel
Friday, February 23, 2024
After
all the false alarms, the crisis of British democracy is finally here. The
cause is not a nebulous concept like “disinformation” or a prime minister
getting ousted by her own party in less time than it took a head of lettuce to
brown, as was the amusing case with Liz Truss in 2022. The actual democratic
process has come under assault, and London is buckling under the pressure.
This
all came to a head on Wednesday. Now there is full agreement across the
political spectrum on what happened and why. The unanswered question is whether
the “Mother of Parliaments,” as England’s contribution to democracy is known,
will do anything about it.
On
Wednesday, the opposition Scottish National Party put up a resolution calling
for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza. Normally, the House of Commons would then
vote on it. But the speaker of the House jettisoned the normal process and
first allowed the Labour Party to water down the language in the resolution.
Why
did the speaker let Labour hijack someone else’s bill? Because, he said, he
feared Labour members of parliament would be assassinated by pro-Hamas thugs if
they didn’t get the language exactly right.
“I
will defend every member in this House. Every member matters to me in this
House,” Speaker Lindsay Hoyle explained. “And it has been said, both sides, I
never, ever want to go through a situation where I pick up a phone to find a
friend of whatever side has been murdered by a terrorist.” Then he referenced a
2017 terror attack on parliament and said: “I also don’t want another attack on
this House. I was in the chair on that day. I have seen, I have witnessed.”
The
obvious question is: If Labour members thought they’d be in danger for voting
against Hamas’s wishes, why wouldn’t they just vote for the SNP ceasefire bill?
The answer is that it would embarrass Labour leader Keir Starmer, who has been
desperately trying to remove the stain of anti-Semitism left by his predecessor
Jeremy Corbyn and didn’t want to see dozens of Labour members vote for the
SNP’s anti-Israel resolution. So he convinced the speaker of the House to break
tradition and protect Labour by letting them go first.
Chaos
ensued. Members of the Tories and SNP walked out. The speaker found himself
fighting to keep his job, offering emotional apologies. Prime Minister Rishi
Sunak scolded the
cowards of the Commons: “I think the important point here is that we should
never let extremists intimidate us into changing the way in which
Parliament works. Parliament is an important place for us to have these
debates. And just because some people may want to stifle that with intimidation
or aggressive behavior, we should not bend to that and change how Parliament
works. That’s a very slippery slope.”
But
a Jewish member of parliament delivered some harsh truths on Thursday. “If we
have a rerun of the debate we had yesterday, we will have exactly the same
thing happen again, which is that members will not vote with their hearts
because they are frightened and they are scared,” Tory MP Andrew Percy said on the House floor.
“And what do we expect? For months I’ve been standing up here talking about the
people on our streets demanding death to Jews, demanding jihad, demanding
intifadas as the police stand by and allow that to happen.”
Percy
then called attention to something that had happened the night before, an
episode both deeply shameful to Britain and chillingly dystopian. Pro-Hamas
protesters projected the genocidal slogan “from the river to the sea, Palestine
will be free” onto parliament’s Elizabeth Tower, better known as Big Ben.
“This
is going to continue happening, because we’re not dealing with it,” Percy
admonished. “So if we have a rerun of this, can the leader explain to me what
will be any different, and how will members vote with their hearts and their
consciences? Because too many will not, at the moment, because of the threats
we’re receiving—threats like telling us to leave this country, in some of our
cases, and telling us that they want us or our families to be subjected to pain
and to death.”
MPs
facing increased death threats have found their homes targeted by activists.
Some have increased their personal security and have been told to stop
advertising some of their in-person appearances.
All
this while they are violating parliamentary norms and changing their votes out
of fear.
In
the U.S., legislators act out of fear of losing the support of pro-Hamas
voters. In the UK, they vote out of fear of being murdered by the same. British
democracy is approaching a truly dark hour.
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