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Correction to 'A Soiled Password: Democracy, the Word and Democracy, the Thing'
In: The political quarterly, Band 83, Heft 3, S. 609-609
ISSN: 1467-923X
A Soiled Password: Democracy, the Word and Democracy, the Thing
In: The political quarterly, Band 83, Heft 2, S. 407-413
ISSN: 1467-923X
The word'democracy' to be distinguished from the thing'democracy.' Removal by the Italian parliament of a corrupt and scandalous Premier for a respected, honest technician and a form of civil service government does not infringe the second category. Referendums give strength to a handful of already overmighty rich men controlling media outlets. Witness Fox Radio and TV and the poison of Glen Beck, also the virulent nationalism of the Murdoch and Desmond papers. Note the fifty plus year lag in enfranchising women in Switzerland, a self‐evident democratic advance held back by 'the voice of the people' in successive referendums. Government should be free from populism and be run by educated, intelligent people both in parliament and the Civil Service. 'Yes Minister,' however amusing, has done us a disservice. I would trust a senior civil servant above a press lord any day of the week. Witness the good sense of the Upper House in its current informed and experienced composition. The Lords blocked Tony Blair's plans to by‐pass Habeas Gorpus, refusing authoritarian government to an elected Premier with no sense of the rule of law or constitutional principle.
Reflections on Elections: Scot‐Nat Fizz, Lib‐Dem Dregs
In: The political quarterly, Band 83, Heft 1, S. 146-151
ISSN: 1467-923X
Alec Salmond's SNP, old politics and fingertips, won a landslide. The Lib Dems, free to confine the Tory plurality, chose the wooden spoon of office.
A Soiled Password: Democracy, the Word and Democracy, the Thing
In: The political quarterly: PQ, Band 83, Heft 2, S. 407-414
ISSN: 0032-3179
Reflections on Elections: Scot‐Nat Fizz, Lib‐Dem Dregs
In: The political quarterly: PQ, Band 83, Heft 1, S. 146-152
ISSN: 0032-3179
Correction to 'A Soiled Password: Democracy, the Word and Democracy, the Thing'
In: The political quarterly: PQ, Band 83, Heft 3, S. 609-610
ISSN: 0032-3179
The Fountain of Honour: Directing the Spray
In: The political quarterly, Band 82, Heft 3, S. 469-475
ISSN: 1467-923X
Pearce argues that honours do not deserve the earnest linguistic toil of the virtuous PAC. Starting with the peers, he observes that when William the Conqueror/Bastard distributed land stolen with violence to his armed band, it was the simple loot from which ancient chivalry, honour and nobility flows. Such lords developed under the more civilised early Whigs, like Walpole, into rent for sending steady support from owned boroughs into the Commons. Witness Bubb Dodington and his three and a half seats in Weymouth, made a Viscount in the name of one of its suburbs.Harold Macmillan would sack a minister with the wheedling consolation 'A Little something to wear under your tie'. By inventing the Life Peerage, he helped the slow subversion of elected government by creating unelected, often powerful ministers with no relationship to country or people, candid nominees of the National Leader. The one virtue of the post‐Macmillan upper house lies in the disloyal, which is say minimally or not all party‐attached people of talent reliably voting against ministerial requirements. As for the insignia of all honours, their bars, discs and ribbons are kept on cards in Palace drawers like so much paste jewellery.
The Fountain of Honour: Directing the Spray
In: The political quarterly: PQ, Band 82, Heft 3, S. 469-476
ISSN: 0032-3179
The Name of the Rose
In: The political quarterly, Band 81, Heft 3, S. 356-362
ISSN: 1467-923X
Party names have been collected since 'Whig' and 'Tory' meant 'Scotch rebel' and 'Irish bandit'. 'Conservative' began as a catch‐all on the right when one did not use the word 'right' in politics, struggled with 'Unionist' until Ireland got away and was a euphemism for 'Tory' before the Americans used it to describe howling extremists. 'Labour' meant skilled men in best suits and school teachers with elbow patches, and now has the resonance of Nineveh and Tyre.
The Enemies of Promise: Labour's Long War against Education
In: The political quarterly, Band 81, Heft 4, S. 627-633
ISSN: 1467-923X
Labour and New Labour alike have been the enemies of education. Consider the brutalism of Charles Clarke—'history for display purposes only'; statistics of achievement based on the soft marking of soft subjects to achieve soviet pig‐iron statistics; fat inspection and thin curriculum; compulsory lesson plans and paper plagues; foreign languages as too difficult. Before all that, remember Anthony Crosland 'destroying their schools if it's the last fucking thing I do' and the consequent rise of the public schools as bought excellence.What to do : Follow Housman's dictum, 'Knowledge is happiness'; rescue good minds in bad places with state places in boarding schools; utilise the quiz nationally the as a pop method to stimulate the study habit; get back to French and German; take the educationalism out of education especially in training colleges; thin inspection down from terror to weather‐eye mentoring.