The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on Brexit rebels: helpful dissent

- Editorial

The moves not to “re-adopt” Conservati­ve MP Nicholas Boles by his local constituen­cy party because he has “gone rogue”, and to deselect Labour’s Luciana Berger for disloyalty, are straws in the political wind. Both MPs are semi-detached from their party leadership, and both have crucially become so over the issue of Britain’s departure from the European Union. Mr Boles has not endeared himself to Tory party activists in Lincolnshi­re, who voted heavily to leave, for working with Labour’s Yvette Cooper to delay Brexit and scupper a catastroph­ic no-deal outcome. Ms Berger backs a second referendum, in defiance of her leadership, and last week refused to rule out leaving Labour for another party.

There are other reasons why some activists in Liverpool’s Wavertree and the east Midlands seat of Grantham and Stamford want to get rid of their MPs. Mr Boles snubbed locals by refusing to move to his constituen­cy and there is a feeling that he is too “London-centric”. In Liverpool Ms Berger has been a thorn in the side of Jeremy Corbyn over what she says is his failure to crack down on antisemiti­sm. Mr Corbyn comes from the left of the party, which has argued that the charge of antisemiti­sm is often levelled without substance to close down criticism of repressive Israeli actions against Palestinia­ns. There are strong views on each side. However, it is welcome that the motions of no confidence were rescinded, particular­ly as Ms Berger is pregnant and has suffered outrageous misogynist­ic and antisemiti­c abuse. Efforts to oust Mr Boles ought to be similarly dropped.

Political parties need to be broad churches to remain relevant. No single thread of political opinion has a monopoly on the popular mood. Parties that slim down their thinking will find themselves shrinking their potential electorate. That is why purging rebel MPs because they disagree is the wrong course of action. In Britain MPs are representa­tives, not delegates. They obey their own judgment over the opinions of their constituen­ts. They might respect local activists’ views and take them into account when reaching

decisions, but MPs ought to retain an independen­ce of thought.

There are good reasons to remove an MP: corruption, criminalit­y, fecklessne­ss or voting to bring down their own government. But expelling someone for a difference of opinion does little to engender faith in political pluralism. It is a turn-off for voters.

As Brexit goes down to the wire, British politics is likely to see rebellions by groups of MPs and crossparty coalitions as well as parliament­arians who dissent from the leadership line. All those involved may face being deselected through campaigns by local activists, radicalise­d by the pro- and anti-Brexit lines of cleavage. Party affiliatio­ns are obscuring the dominant issue in British politics. But to paraphrase John Stuart Mill, Westminste­r needs dissenters, even if they are wrong, to sharpen our view of the truth.

 ??  ?? Luciana Berger. ‘There are strong views on either side yet all surely should take into considerat­ion that Mrs Berger is pregnant and has suffered outrageous mysognisti­c and antisemiti­c abuse.’ Photograph: Jonathan Hordle/ITV/Rex/Shuttersto­ck
Luciana Berger. ‘There are strong views on either side yet all surely should take into considerat­ion that Mrs Berger is pregnant and has suffered outrageous mysognisti­c and antisemiti­c abuse.’ Photograph: Jonathan Hordle/ITV/Rex/Shuttersto­ck

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