On a day of dramatic
political developments
it seems something of a sideshow that Brighton and Hove City Council will soon have
to debate a motion calling
upon the Council not to recognise the titles of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex.
However, there
is a connection between the doling out of the name of our county as an “honour”
to the unentitled and the events which will lead once
more to protests on our streets this evening. Boris Johnson’s prorogation
of Parliament (in which our “constitutional monarch” served simply as a tool of
her Prime Minister) was an exercise of the Royal prerogative, demonstrating
that, in our unwritten constitution it is “the Crown in Parliament”
which is sovereign. The anachronism of the monarchy stands at the apex of our
ossified class system, including the nonsense of aristocratic titles (such as “Duke
and Duchess of Sussex”) – but, more importantly right now, the monarchy is also
the excuse which enables a single individual to dictate to a supposedly
sovereign Parliament when that Parliament may sit.
Johnson’s push
for a “no deal” Brexit is – more than anything else – an attack upon the
material interests of working-class people. It is part of an ambitious project
to push this country further rightwards. It is part of the class war being
waged by the wealthy against us.
However, the
light shone upon our constitution by the prorogation helps to emphasise that
our opposition to the Government’s strategy cannot be about defending any
aspect of the status quo (including the status quo of the EU) but must be about
achieving real change, including constitutional change.
We don’t just
need a Labour Government which will repair some of the social vandalism of the
past decade – we also need a Labour Government
prepared to consider profound constitutional change. Labour’s
constitutional convention would give us the opportunity to consider how to
really achieve Parliamentary sovereignty (including giving the Commons control
over its own business), but also how to do away with the absurdity of an
unelected part of our legislature and the anachronism of monarchy.
The movement
which is emerging on our streets will raise many more issues and our Council may well find it timely to consider these constitutional issues when it comes to consider what to do about the Duke and Duchess we didn't ask for...
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