To say the Queen has succeeded by 'not putting a foot wrong' is to miss the point of a head of state
Our political system is profoundly flawed. It is just about democratic, giving the people the once-every-five-years opportunity to elect less than half our parliamentarians. Then we’re locked out as power rushes back to the centre, to the prime minister and his ministers.
That’s one reason why we need to get rid of the Crown – the source of the prime ministers’s power – and introduce a new democratic constitution. A Westminster system made good, fully elected parliament and a head of state with a genuine role to play in the constitutional process. Not running the country but guarding our constitution and handling political crises when they arise.
It’s also a matter of principle, an opposition to hereditary public office and a need for an accountable head of state. That’s why today’s milestone is not a cause for celebration. Keeping a job-for-life for life is not an achievement, and instead reflects real need for radical democratic reform.
The Queen has survived this long in her role as head of state for one reason: she has never had to face election or be held to account. When anyone survives in public office for this long it is usually a sign of something wrong, either in the country’s constitution or in the political culture. There is either a lack of will to challenge that person or a lack of mechanism to remove them – or both.
To say the Queen has succeeded by ‘not putting a foot wrong’ is to miss the point of a head of state and to set the bar for success very low indeed. The Queen has said nothing and done little that anyone can remember over 63 years in office. So instead we see commentators and cheerleaders projecting the nation’s history, changes and achievements onto the monarch.
The reality is that the Queen has succeeded only in serving the monarchy and the status quo. It is now time for the country to look to the future and to choose a successor through free and fair elections, someone who can genuinely represent the nation. It is time to challenge the ‘done nothing wrong’ narrative and challenge royal abuse of public money, challenge the £334m a year price tag, challenge the secrecy and stop the royals meddling in politics.
It’s pretty simple really. There is a democratic alternative, a simple way to make our Westminster system genuinely representative from top to bottom. It works in Ireland and elsewhere, and we can make it work too, and then some.
Instead of a tired old hereditary institution that locks out the people, let’s have something that celebrates, symbolises and practices democratic values. Rather than celebrating an election-free reign, let’s celebrate the power of the people.
Graham Smith is the chief executive officer of Republic
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31 Responses to “Comment: Anyone surviving in public office for this long is a sign of something wrong”
jj
What in heavens name is the point of a president when we have a PM?
The monarchy rakes in 200 million a year for the UK economy, argue with those who are directly or indirectly employed by the monarchy, and you may realise why it needs to stay
ted francis
What nonsense. It is the fabric, buildings, ceremony, tradition not individuals that bring in the tourists. Vide Paris, Venice, Rome etc. The tourists rarely see any of the Windsor clan.
jj
It isn’t just tourism, that’s the thing, thousands are employed by the monarchy, directly and indirectly.
ted francis
The house of Grimaldi “fawned over”? I don’t think so. There are many in France who are know of the Windsors’ original name and their friendship with the Nazi gang of barbarians. The teaching is that the Republic of France was created in 1798 as a reaction to the excesses of monarchy. As for Attlee’s gongs, how else could he have been honoured – canonisation?
Selohesra
Electing a head of state can be very divisive – even supposedly popular leaders such as Obama got only just over half the votes and its not beyond the realms of possibility that France end up with the embarrassment of Le Pen as President. The Queen being apolitical is someone a far greater proportion of the country can unite around