MY fears after Parliament left ‘enfeebled’ by lockdown – David Davis

FORMER Brexit Secretary David Davis spoke in the Commons about the importance of Parliamentary proceedings during the Covid-19 pandemic. This is an edited version.
David DavisDavid Davis
David Davis

THE operation of democracy today, as we observe it in the House, is more enfeebled than I have seen it in 33 years here.

That is a tragedy of the Government’s making, and one that we need to fix as soon as possible.

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The aim of the House is to hold the Government to account, but also to drive the direction of policy.

David Davis is a former Brexit Secretary. He says Parliament is failing in its duty to scrutinise Government policy.David Davis is a former Brexit Secretary. He says Parliament is failing in its duty to scrutinise Government policy.
David Davis is a former Brexit Secretary. He says Parliament is failing in its duty to scrutinise Government policy.

If the Leader of the House (Jacob Rees-Mogg) wants to see how that is not working properly, an example was given earlier: the six-person limit on gatherings, which has not been enforced of course, and truthfully cannot be enforced in a democracy.

That would never have happened had the measure had to go through the proper procedures of ​this House.

Similarly, the daft quarantine regulations we now have would never have survived the normal procedures of the House. Democracy is critical to good government, and that is not what we are seeing here today.

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I know it has always been an ambition of the Leader of the House to make the European Parliament look great. Well, he has succeeded today.

Jacob Rees-Mogg is the Leader of the Commons.Jacob Rees-Mogg is the Leader of the Commons.
Jacob Rees-Mogg is the Leader of the Commons.

I have one controversial point to make, which comes down to this: this House has no life. It does not challenge Ministers properly.

It must be the easiest thing in the
 world – I have done this a few times – 
to come to the Dispatch Box and deal
 with this House as it currently 
stands.

A large part of that arises because 
of the two metre rule, and the fact that 
we can have only 50 people in the Chamber. The atmosphere, drive, ferocity, and the mood of the House just does not exist.

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We have to think about how we get back to normal, and how quickly we can do that.

Clearly, we have to do it in a safe 
way, both for ourselves and as an 
example to our constituents and the country.

I can think of only one way that could be done.

According to Government numbers, we currently have a surplus of 80,000 tests a day. So we are not short of tests anymore.

We may not be exercising them all, but we have that surplus.

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Austria, at Vienna airport, manages to carry out tests in two to three hours, from test to result.

Will the Leader of the House consider instituting that here?

Every morning between 8am and 9.30am, and perhaps if we start late until 12.30, every person who comes into the Chamber could be tested and then we would not need the two metre rule anymore.

Then we can suddenly have back the Parliament that was, and is, the envy of the world.

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Jacob Rees-Mogg, the Leader of the Commons, earlier defended Parliament’s changes which last week saw MPs queue around the Palace of Westminster before voting.

I have every sympathy with 
Members who feel that the constraints 
of the pand emic prevent them from 
being able to attend in Westminster.

The work of scrutiny is so important that it is right that we have brought forward a motion to allow those 
affected to have their say during 
scrutiny proceedings, but I remain conscious of how important it is that Members who participate in the 
decision-making process of the 
House ought and need to do so in 
person.

As we saw last week, the decision 
on whether to vote Aye or No is a 
public one, for which individual Members can often find themselves held to account.

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It is a decision that should only ever be taken after the kind of serious consideration and engagement which is only possible when all those concerned are in Westminster.

By the time Members are asked 
to vote, Ministers want to have had 
the chance to talk through fully any specific concerns of individuals or groups.

That remains my strong view.

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Sincerely. Thank you.

James Mitchinson

Editor

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