Big Ben and Houses of Parliament insights4u.co.uk |
For one thing, if
you change schools often, you don’t put down intellectual roots. This means
that you don’t properly belong to any one thread of history. You have become
disconnected from your own historical thread, the one you left behind when you
went to live in another country, and you have arrived too late in the academic
year, or even in the trajectory of your life, to pick up that of your adopted land.
You feel disconnected from its particular contextual flow, from how your peers are
already being shaped and acquiring their political identity from within their
history. This puts you in a defensive position, one which makes it difficult
for trust to take root, so you switch off during history lessons and, as a
result, become even more alienated.
Perhaps one of the important things to learn from this
election is that we are in the process of re-thinking our history, a history which
is being shaped demographically. We can look at this demographic re-shaping of
history in a positive light, if we choose to do so, or we can feel threatened
by it. The choice is open to all of us.
Our history is also being shaped by a fluid ‘pick and mix’
approach to politics, and by rapid change and temporary party alliances within
the political system. It is arguable that these temporary alliances are in part
a response to the rapid changes we experience at every level of our consumerist
collective life. We have become a pick and mix society, picking and choosing between
different party policies but seldom clear about how we coalesce as a nation. Even
so, this political fragmentation may yet bear fruit in surprising ways.
What is needed is the re-establishment of trust,
beginning with a genuine renewal of the system itself. The old two party system
is faltering because a sizeable proportion of the population does not feel
connected to it. This feeling of disconnectedness has grown out of a sense of
disillusionment with the political system itself and with the people who govern
through it. The system is a closed one by virtue of the way votes are counted
and power subsequently allocated, and by the forced obeisance imposed through the
party Whip.
It seems almost certain that the outcome of this election
will lead to one of two things; either a marriage of convenience similar to
that of the last parliament or, preferably, to a minority government in which
all will have to listen to each other for the sake of the common good, and
thereby begin to shape a new and better history for this country. They will do
this by taking shared decisions on a policy by policy basis. The difference
between these two methods of governance lies in their potential for re-building
trust in a political system which has been strained to the limit as a result of the last two general elections.
On the one hand, and most recently, coalitions, despite their moderating
effects, ultimately reduce governance to deal-making behind closed doors, to
which all parties to the marriage are obliged to sign up even if they played no
direct part in the brokering of the deal and know that those who voted for them
disagree with the policy in question. On the other, lies the possibly less
efficient but more transparent way of reaching decisions whereby policies are agreed
upon openly and collectively on the basis of what is most good and sensible for
the nation as a whole.
As with the system, so with the people who hold the power
within it. Cameron’s recent Freudian slip suggests that politicians must speak
and act in ways which protect their careers, even if the speaking and the
acting do not ultimately coincide. As a result, those standing for election to
the highest office in the land are tainted with the same distrust which many
feel towards the political system as a whole. This will continue for as long as
politicians choose to retain the present electoral system and operate within
its protective confines, but history has proved that disillusionment in the
people who take advantage of flawed systems, and govern through them, has serious
consequences. Politicians may be just like the rest of us but more is expected
of them. That is the real price of power.
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