Wednesday, 7 September 2011

If Nadine Dorries took a penalty kick, this is what would happen










Or as Andrew Sparrow put it earlier...'

It is certainly a terrible defeat, perhaps even a textbook example of how not to approach a free-vote, conscience issue. Dorries tabled what appeared at face value a relatively technical change, and yet she ended up losing the support of her government, a large section of her party and even the co-sponsor of her amendment (Frank Field).

But this wasn't really a decisive encounter in the culture war; it was more a case of Westminster ganging up on one of parliament's easiest targets. (Which is why the PMQ's exchange earlier was significant. When your own party leader treats you as a figure of ridicule, you are in trouble.) Does this really tell us much about the balance of power between social liberalism and social conservatism in Britain today? I doubt it. The only lesson that really stands out is that, if you want change legislation on a contentious issue, don't ask Dorries to take the lead.

2 comments:

  1. Andrew Sparrow is right.

    There are some serious issues of conscience around with real pros and cons of both sides of the argument that deserve debated in a considered and adult manner - and then a solution that works for for a pluralist society arrived at.

    Having a joke figure leading doesn't really help either side.

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  2. Yes, would have been a very different event if Frank Field had led for example. Although of course It would have been a very different debate as well - rather more in common with the words of the actual amendment, rather than the implied meaning.

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