What’s becoming clear is that basic constitutional politics is not understood in the UK, and it’s beginning to affect a lot of common activity. One symptom is the total confusion of events and the scene at the door of Number 10 anytime there’s a problem.
The many competing figures in Commons politics is becoming Olympian in its size and scope. Even a notorious criminal is attempting a reentry for a regime of sorts of his own. The calamity is a clamour for more than the UK can reasonably aim for or collect in reality.
The ruin of real politics into word plays and ideas structures is also revealing a tendency to attract trouble. There’s a personality politics that’s a flaw rather than just a fault in the system. The scourge of wording things out has lost us crucial progress on a national level.
A return to what the constitution is will save us from madness. We can’t live on bread alone. How things are done isn’t supposed to read as a weekly guide to re-writing ideology with changes if a lawless freak tells us so. That isn’t government. It’s the madness of crowds.
