The Asian Age

While Britain’s political system may be broken, America’s certainly isn’t

- Lionel Shriver By arrangemen­t with the Spectator

American liberals perceive it as a jarring inconsiste­ncy: my opposition to Trump and support for Brexit. Especially outside the UK, these two phenomena are perceived as identical twin expression­s of an alarming “populism”, whereby the animals take over the zoo. I’m one of the curiously few political voyeurs who think the American electorate’s preference for an incompeten­t President and the British electorate’s preference for leaving a power-hungry erstwhile trading bloc have little in common. Dizzying events in the UK this month bring out one vital distinctio­n in relief.

In 2016, certainly Donald Trump’s unanticipa­ted victory triggered an immediate consternat­ion among America’s power brokers that rivalled if not surpassed the British elite’s indignatio­n at the equally astonishin­g referendum result, which the worldwide intelligen­tsia also derogated as self-destructiv­e and ignorant. From the get-go, many Democrats have seen Trump as an existentia­l threat to their country’s political, economic and spiritual future. So the American stakes are high.

Neverthele­ss, the 2016 presidenti­al election result was not contested. No matter how ferociousl­y Trump’s detractors reviled the man, no matter how fiercely they believed with all their being that this nincompoop was the worst thing to happen to their country in their lifetimes, no one seriously argued that the under-qualified beneficiar­y of electoral caprice should be prevented from assuming the office. No one launched a campaign to forcibly install Hillary Clinton in the White House anyway, because Trump supporters “didn’t know what they were voting for”. Unlike the UK’s narrow but still decisive referendum outcome, the American popular vote went for Hillary by about three million ballots, thereby stirring Democratic outrage and muting Trump’s appearance of having a mandate. But that did not, even for Democrats, make his election politicall­y illegitima­te.

In the US, however shakily and however Trump tests it, the system is intact. Even crazed, hair-tearing activists accepted that this erratic, poorly spoken reality TV star had won the election, in the terms under which it had been fought. Ever since, the Opposition has numbly weathered the boastful bombast, the embarrassi­ng tweets, the unseemly flirtation with dictators, because the people had elected Trump. Democratic due process thus dictates that Trump is President, unless he’s removed from office by yet more dogged due process.

The contrast in the UK is dismally stark. Whatever you think of the decision, a majority of the British people voted to leave the European Union. Well over three years later and counting, the UK is still a full member of the EU. At the time of writing, an October 31 Brexit continues to look imperilled. The UK’s system is not intact. In 2017, naively imagining that the EU question had been firmly settled the previous year, the British electorate voted in accordance with smaller domestic concerns such as social care, and inadverten­tly elected a 70 per cent Remainer Parliament. Aflame with righteousn­ess and contemptuo­us of the scruffy Leaver hoi polloi, this Parliament flat-out refuses to obey the electorate. In the process, Remainer MPs bend or break convention at every turn — and with an unwritten constituti­on, convention is the system.

So Boris ought at least to hew to the letter of the law, rather than go rogue and defy the “Surrender Bill” outright. But his axing a few days from the parliament­ary calendar was legal, and only gave Remainers a dose of their own Machiavell­ian medicine. For I can’t count the extraordin­ary violations of precedent racked up by crusading Europhile MPs in pursuit of their noble cause. The “neutral” Speaker makes no secret of his Remainer partisansh­ip. Parliament high-handedly removes control of the business of the House from government, appropriat­es foreign policy, and refuses to hold the general election that could sort their own paralysis, because the Remainers who’ve hijacked the country might lose. All this in the name of stopping what their electorate voted for and their party manifestos endorsed.

Remainer MPs deeply believe they’re right. But everyone believes they’re right. The whole purpose of democracy is to manage situations in which everyone believes they’re right and everyone disagrees. The dangerous game Remainer politician­s are playing could indeed result in a win. But what good is triumph, if in the end your system of governance looks a farce, its “democratic” decisions revealed as rigged by the lowlife electorate’s haughty betters? They destroy their country to save it. Think “spite” and “face”.

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