Lance Gardner MBE (@lanceaacltd) 's Twitter Profile
Lance Gardner MBE

@lanceaacltd

Passionate about people and relationships. I am a Care Architect - I design care plans and pathways for people and companies. I love running and SUFC

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calendar_today04-04-2017 17:58:14

319 Tweet

113 Followers

59 Following

Richard Haviland (@rfhaviland) 's Twitter Profile Photo

With all the red lights flashing at the state of the UK’s democracy, I’ve seen it said we shouldn’t assume the next general election will even happen. The issue, though, isn’t whether an election will happen (it will). It’s whether it will be free and fair (it won’t). THREAD

Richard Haviland (@rfhaviland) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The UK isn't about to become a totalitarian state. But it’s well on the way to becoming a sham democracy. And elections are essential to a sham democracy. They allow it to claim international legitimacy. And they reassure a sleeping public that they still have their freedom.

Richard Haviland (@rfhaviland) 's Twitter Profile Photo

But scratch below the surface and things are bleak. Voter suppression. A neutered electoral commission to be brought under government control. Public money withheld from constituencies that don’t vote Tory. Personal data used to target susceptible voters with blatant lies.

Richard Haviland (@rfhaviland) 's Twitter Profile Photo

And yet many people seem to believe that the mere holding of an election or referendum is all that matters. That those things alone constitute democracy. The very word ā€œdemocracyā€ has been weaponised.

Richard Haviland (@rfhaviland) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Never mind ruling by executive fiat. Never mind closing down parliament. Never mind going to excruciating lengths to avoid scrutiny. Never mind attacking all the institutions whose role is to hold you to account. "We've had an election ergo we live in a healthy democracy".

Richard Haviland (@rfhaviland) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Many in the Conservative Party are encouraging this way of thinking. In response to recent scandals, I’ve heard Dominic Raab and Daniel Hannan, among others, say that if the public don’t like it they can vote the Government out.

Richard Haviland (@rfhaviland) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Their meaning is clear. Once elected, a Government should be entitled to do what it wants without limit or challenge, and it is only the electorate - at the next election - which has the right to hold it to account.

Richard Haviland (@rfhaviland) 's Twitter Profile Photo

When your reasoning is this warped, opposition, scrutiny and debate, holding the powerful to account, all the things that are the very essence of liberal democracy, are seen as anti-democratic. The poles are inverted.

Richard Haviland (@rfhaviland) 's Twitter Profile Photo

It's an authoritarian position, revealed time and again in the things Tory MPs such as Joy Morrissey MP say on social media, often before rushing to press delete, as she did yesterday. Being elected means you can do no wrong, and being unelected means you have no legitimacy.

Richard Haviland (@rfhaviland) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Since the Brexit vote, many people have fallen for this. And even if they haven’t, if their preference is for permanent or entrenched Conservative power, they are unlikely to do too much to challenge it.

Richard Haviland (@rfhaviland) 's Twitter Profile Photo

So no, we are not about to see general elections come to an end. But there is a danger that the mere fact of their taking place will be seen as evidence that the UK has a healthy democracy.

Richard Haviland (@rfhaviland) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Together, of course, with a referendum held half a decade ago, in which the vote of a minority of the population was used as a mandate for a full-scale revolution.

Richard Haviland (@rfhaviland) 's Twitter Profile Photo

As a further thought, who’s to say that if the devolved governments continue to be formed by parties opposed to the Tories, or to the Union, they won’t also one day be deemed "undemocratic?"

Richard Haviland (@rfhaviland) 's Twitter Profile Photo

You can pick up hints in the utterings of some politicians and commentators, with their not-so-subtle messages that the success of the SNP in Scotland means democracy isn’t working.

Richard Haviland (@rfhaviland) 's Twitter Profile Photo

It’s not too great a leap of imagination to envisage these people calling one day for the dissolution of the devolved parliaments.

Richard Haviland (@rfhaviland) 's Twitter Profile Photo

After all, rather than try to convince people of the merits of the Union in a post-Brexit, authoritarian UK, easier just to remove the institution that gives voice to the counter-arguments.

Richard Haviland (@rfhaviland) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Especially if you can persuade yourself that you’re doing it all in the name of democracy. Your own, special kind of democracy.

Richard Haviland (@rfhaviland) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Yesterday's result gives me hope that the Tories will yet go down in flames. But I'm still not confident. And you can be assured they will continue to undermine democracy across the UK, at all levels, if that's what they deem necessary to hold on to power. ENDS