The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on MPs’ security: it takes culture change

- Editorial

In the week since Sir David Amess was killed, many people who did not know the man have learned something about his work. Beneficiar­ies of the causes for which he campaigned have illuminate­d one of the more neglected parts of Britain’s democratic constituti­on – the work that MPs do in their local communitie­s. The constituen­cy link is an umbilical connection that oxygenates the Commons as a representa­tive chamber.

That function is under threat when MPs do not feel safe in their surgeries or on the streets. The chill of vulnerabil­ity afflicts MPs’ families and staff, local councillor­s and anyone who serves on the political frontline, which is a metaphor that should never have come to describe a literal threat.

Wishing for a more secure environmen­t is easier than constructi­ng one without erecting barriers between politician­s and the people who elect them. Police officers and screens at MPs’ surgeries may be necessary to pre-empt violent assaults, but each degree of physical separation reinforces the division between two worlds that should, when democracy works properly, be joined.

Finding the balance between security and openness is not easy. The challenge touches every detail of the political process, down to the issue, raised by a decision of the parliament­ary watchdog this week, of redacting personal informatio­n from published MP expenses receipts. The public have a right to know how their money is spent, but perhaps not to know the exact addresses of hotels where MPs stay on visits.

It is important to distinguis­h between types of threat. In the wake of last week’s attack there has, understand­ably, been much focus on the coarsening of political discourse and the increase in casual abuse of politician­s, online and in person. Casual in this context does not mean harmless. Death threats, rape threats, the most extreme racism – the volume of it can be overwhelmi­ng and traumatisi­ng. Those on the receiving end have no doubt that social media, and the cloak of anonymity it can provide, have made the problem much worse.

But anonymity also has benefits for a democracy. It can give cover for whistleblo­wers and security for vulnerable people reaching out for help. It can allow frightened people without power to find their voice. By contrast, much of the dehumanisi­ng rhetoric that normalises political violence is spread not anonymousl­y, but by people who crave attention through notoriety and perform their hatred openly.

The digital realm is a breeding ground for extremism, while social media companies are in denial about the extent to which their business models are lubricated by streams of vitriol. But there is also a necessary distinctio­n to be drawn between incivility, which corrodes political decency, and ideologies that actively reject democracy. Early reports suggest Sir David’s alleged killer might have been motivated by jihadist doctrine. Jo Cox’s assassin was a white supremacis­t. It would be a category error to conflate acts of terrorism with the generalise­d degradatio­n of political debate.

That doesn’t mean there is no connection. Embittered citizens in an atomised and mistrustfu­l political culture might be more susceptibl­e to radicalisa­tion. But that dynamic cannot easily be measured, nor fixed with a single law. It is a function, among other things, of declining trust in institutio­ns and depleted social solidarity – problems that have built over decades.

The complexity of the challenge is not cause for despair. The evidence of the past week alone demonstrat­es an appetite for more civil politics that allows for the expression of different beliefs within a recognitio­n of common democratic enterprise. It is the invigorati­on of that spirit, alongside good works in his constituen­cy, that can and should stand as Sir David’s enduring legacy.

 ?? Photograph: Rob Pinney/Getty Images ?? Floral tributes to Sir David Amess outside parliament. ‘Finding the balance between security and openness is not easy.’
Photograph: Rob Pinney/Getty Images Floral tributes to Sir David Amess outside parliament. ‘Finding the balance between security and openness is not easy.’

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