A seat in the House of Commons is not a job for life. And just as the Parliamentary Labour Party should not be encumbered with MPs increasingly at odds with their local constituency parties, so Tory MPs should not be immune from deselection if they repeatedly ignore the priorities and concerns of grassroots Conservative Party members
Try as I might, I simply cannot get myself worked up about the government’s “shock” defeat over the amendment to the EU Withdrawal Bill. While the legislative drama seems to have Hard Brexiteers up in arms and Remainers parading their newfound (and one suspects rather less than genuine) love and respect for Parliamentary sovereignty, I don’t see that these machinations will have any real bearing on the eventual outcome.
So Parliament gets to have a “meaningful” vote on the terms of the UK-EU agreement? Fine, so be it – though I have always held that the people, not Parliament, should be sovereign, and that no government should be able to divest itself of fundamentally important powers or seek to repatriate such powers without an explicit and specific mandate from the people. Of course, if we had a written constitution then such things would likely be enshrined automatically rather than be up for furious debate as new issues and obstacles are encountered along the road. But then if we had a written constitution we likely would never have ceded so much sovereignty to the European Union in the first place and would not now be in this position, making it all a rather moot point.
Of far more interest to me is the fact that talk of deselection of MPs has bubbled up again. We saw this last year as Jeremy Corbyn and his supporters sought to cement their control of the Parliamentary Labour Party, and for democratic reasons I supported the idea of mandatory reselection in principle. And now there are new calls to deselect sitting MPs, this time from Conservative politicians and activists angry at what they see as the Tory rebels’ deliberate undermining of the prime minister and the country’s negotiating position with the EU:
Sam,
Agree with some of this but I believe that Brexit as an issue is uniquely different. Parliament voted to give the people the choice on Leave or Remain. MPs supported this overwhelmingly. The Government, in its taxpayer-funded propaganda booklet stated that they would implement what the people decide. Crystal clear, no ambiguity. The people made their choice. Subsequently there have been other parliamentary votes and these too, have moved us along the path of Brexit, in line with the clear instruction from the people.
It is not open to MPs to seek to thwart Brexit by continual delays and lying to the people that elected them. Those that do and put themselves forward as cheerleaders for a Remain position and who join with Marxist opportunists, need to be subject to re-selection.
My MP, like many other Conservative MPs, was a Remainer. Since the vote he has publicly supported and also in Parliament, the Conservative government’s position. That is how it should be.
We made our choice. We chose to leave and all that is required of MPs is to do their job and implement the choice that we made.