1st June 2022
The greatest ongoing constitutional problem in the United Kingdom is not the lack of a written, codified constitution.
It it is the lack of constitutionalism among leading politicians.
This lack of constitutionalism is not a new thing, but under the current Prime Minister there would appear to be no constitutionalism whatsoever.
Constitutionalism is, in general, the notion that there are certain fundamental political rules with which one should comply, regardless of any personal or partisan advantage.
Some of these rules are legal, but many are conventions or norms.
Some of these rules are capable of some kind of enforcement, by law or otherwise, but generally their purchase comes mainly from self-restraint.
For, as the late Labour member of parliament Austin Mitchell once put it, the British constitution is whatever the government can get away with.
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One index of the lack of constitutionalism in the United Kingdom is the various ways that governments – of various parties – have set up various gimmicks to make it look like constitutionalism is being taken seriously.
One such gimmick was the Committee on Standards in Public Life established in 1994 under the Conservative government of John Major when it was decided that something must be done.
That committee then gave us a list of seven principles of public life – which all sound impressive but in practice are so vague and vaporous that they really do not mean anything meaningful at all.
Aspirational, uplifting, comforting word bingo.
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And, as the jurist Jimmy Cricket would say, there is more.
Under Tony Blair’s Labour government of 1997 we had the Ministerial Code.
Rarely has there ever been a more pointless constitutional document.
Nothing in constitutional terms changed – the Prime Minister still was the sole decision-maker about what happened to ministers and about whether any minister had done something wrong.
There was no real independence – the code had no autonomy, it offered no check or balance.
And nobody could decide whether the Prime Minister had broken the code other than the Prime Minister.
The code was metaphorical ornate wallpaper – to complement the actual ornate wallpaper of Blair’s first Lord Chancellor Derry Irvine.
The Ministerial Code is what you get when you just codify something about the constitution without any serious thought about its application, adjudication, and enforcement.
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We now come to yesterday’s report by the “Independent Adviser on Ministers’ Interests” – Lord Geidt – whose role is to advise the Prime Minister on matters relating to the Ministerial Code.
The word “independent” here is misleading, if not false.
For example, let us look at this passage from the preface:
“In a letter of 23 December 2021 to the Prime Minister, I wrote that, ‘I would expect by the time of my next Annual Report in April to be able to describe the role of Independent Adviser in terms of considerably greater authority, independence and effect’.”
Greater?
Greater?
Any authority, independence and effect would be a fine thing – for one cannot logically have a greater amount of nothing.
Let us read on.
Here is another passage:
“Granting the Independent Adviser an independent right to initiate inquiries into ministerial conduct has been called for over many years. The changes now offered by the Government are at a low level of ambition.”
This can be re-worded as a call to grant to the “Independent” adviser, well, actual independence.
And so on.
There is nothing meaningfully independent about his role in any active sense.
And as this adviser cannot do anything active, the adviser – in the great tradition of British tuttery – is instead passive aggressive.
(Jacob Rees-Mogg putting “sorry to have missed you” notices on the seats of absent civil servants has nothing on the passive aggression in this report.)
See for example:
“For much of the year, the conduct of the Prime Minister himself has potentially been subject to consideration against the requirements of the Code. Accordingly, and whether unfairly or not, an impression has developed that the Prime Minister may be unwilling to have his own conduct judged against the Code’s obligations.”
That is weapons-grade tuttery.
Again:
“It may be especially difficult to inspire that trust in the Ministerial Code if any Prime Minister, whose code it is, declines to refer to it. In the case of the Fixed Penalty Notice recently issued to and paid by the Prime Minister, a legitimate question has arisen as to whether those facts alone might have constituted a breach of the overarching duty within the Ministerial Code of complying with the law.”
Tut, tut, tut.
The preface continues with an articulation by the adviser of his own constitutional impotence:
“In the present circumstances, I have attempted to avoid the Independent Adviser offering advice to a Prime Minister about a Prime Minister’s obligations under his own Ministerial Code.”
And then we have the immortal line:
“If a Prime Minister’s judgement is that there is nothing to investigate or no case to answer, he would be bound to reject any such advice, thus forcing the resignation of the Independent Adviser.
“Such a circular process could only risk placing the Ministerial Code in a place of ridicule.”
The problem here is that the Ministerial Code is already in a place of ridicule.
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Lord Geidt is plainly doing the best he can with the remit he has got.
Other than to offer his resignation, tuttery is all he can do.
For the real issue is beyond what Lord Geidt can do with his report or otherwise.
The Ministerial Code is a nonsense.
It is no more than a thirty-six page statement of the obvious political and constitutional truth that a Prime Minister can hire and fire and retain ministers as he or she feels fit, on whatever basis he or she she wants to employ.
The nonsense of the code was made most stark when it was found recently that the Home Secretary was in breach, but the Home Secretary stayed in office and the then “independent” adviser resigned.
Last week, when it was revealed that some of the wording of the code had changed so that resignations were not necessarily expected, some pundits were concerned.
But it actually did not matter.
The textual changes may as well have been scribbles of a bored Boris Johnson, because the content of the Ministerial Code has no constitutional import outside of what a Prime Minister decides it has.
Which is to say it has no real constitutional import at all.
The only “independent” thing Lord Geidt can do, now that the tuttery has failed, is to resign.
And he should do so.
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