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Robert Phillips

If certain news reports are to be believed, David Cameron might just offer Nick Clegg and the LibDems a ‘deal’ in the event of a hung parliament: they can have Proportional Representation, but just not everywhere. It might be ok for Europe and for local Councils, but of course not for Parliament. To many, this seems rather odd. The man giveth and the man taketh away.

Likewise, Gordon Brown has become a recent convert to the cause of PR – his zealotry becoming ever more impassioned the longer the Clegg surge continues. He cuddled up to the notion of PR at the height of the Parliamentary expenses scandal, too, and now he is at it again. We must all wonder why.

Both Brown and Cameron are clearly still playing politics with the citizen. Now, perhaps, it is time for the Citizen to turn the tables and to hold both men – and their Parties – to account.

This is not, then, the first time in recent memory that Brown and Cameron have flirted with Electoral Reform – nor is it the first time that this Blog has considered the (much needed) reform of the voting system as a likely consequence of the current political crisis in Britain. As the first edition of Citizen Renaissance argued, the UK desperately needs both a proportionately elected system of government and a written constitution with clearly stated citizen-centric values if it is to unlock the paralysis which – political poster jokes notwithstanding – is driving us back to the ‘80s and ‘70s and beyond. If we are to address the Perfect Storm surrounding Climate Change (sadly reduced to the role of silent killer in this Election) and find the path to an economy built on Wellbeing and not derivative madness, then the system has to change.

A more radical solution will see a three-way separation: direct elections for the Prime Minister (we could maybe just add a red-button voting device to the televised debates?); a proportionately elected House of Commons; and a directly elected Upper House, obviously free from the hereditary nonsense but making sure that everyone from teachers to farmers to nurses and firemen are properly represented.

All of this presents an uncomfortable truth for a majority of politicians from the two main parties to swallow. Too many easily confuse the constitutional rights of citizenship with – as they see it, incorrectly – the perils and potential anarchy of direct democracy. But, as Nick Clegg pointed out in a BBC interview, it is patently absurd for the party with the least number of votes but, perversely, the most number of seats, to offer up the next Prime Minister of the country. In a further twist of fate (see Blog posts passim), it is of course equally absurd to have as the key decision-maker and power-broker an un-elected Head of State, whose only ‘legitimate’ claim to authority is by way of a privileged and accidental birth. But that argument is for another day. The most compelling fact is that this could (and should) be the last election of a broken two-party model. A new, more trusting, consensus will thankfully emerge. Some (Cameron included) will portray this as a recipe for instability and indecision. Evidence from many other mature democracies will tell you this is in fact the route towards a more trusting, civilised and progressive society.

One of the many quirks of the current system is that the monarch will call upon the largest Party – and not necessarily the leader of that Party – to form the next government in the event of a hung parliament. Step forward Miliband, D or Miliband, E if Brown, G is really not wanted by the other Party players? Even Lord Mandelson or a Tory-who-may-not-be-Dave might be in the frame. In this sense, all is very much to play for – and the enlightened, if somewhat mischievous, citizen will therefore be one who openly campaigns for a hung parliament and finally breaks this corrosive and anachronistic system of election.

So what is the best Citizen’s Advice?

First, Place the need for wider political and constitutional reform and renewal above party allegiances and narrow interests. Without political reform, there is no real chance of long-term economic recovery and sustained wellbeing.

Second, vote tactically. If you believe in the restorative values of PR, then place your vote wisely to make it happen. Even if, like me, you are a Labour voter, consider how you vote in this wider context. How will your constituency fit within the wider, national piece?

Third, don’t let the politicians get away with broken promises or partial reform. Remember the Jenkins Commission post-1997 and Tony Blair’s brief flirtation with Paddy Ashdown, Proportional Representation and Lords reform prior to that? Think about Cameron’s pledges and hedges now. Political accountability must continue long after this election is over – there is a thirst for change among the British electorate, and we must all ride with it and harness its vital energy.

Fourth, don’t lose the activism and discourse that has suddenly been awoken. Britain is once again alive to political debate and therefore to potential citizen action also. General Election 2010 must be the start of a new era of open, participative democracy. We must take it from here and re-establish real priorities alongside economic recovery – focussed on the environment and wellbeing.

One of the greatest ironies of recent weeks has been the fact that the consumerisation of politics reached its apogee in the very first of the Prime Ministerial debates, as Alistair Stewart played the MC in a certain, rather odd, Krypton Factor style. But this very consumerisation re-ignited a new conversation. It gave a rightful voice to a legitimate third party. And it demonstrated that ‘change’ is not the sole domain of just one party in opposition. Above all, it allowed the citizens’ voices to be heard. The cry is for reform and renewal – and the politicians of both ‘old’ parties would be ill-advised to play fast and loose with this in a final ten days of naked, political opportunism.

It would seem – from the opinion Polls – that the centre ground has now moved forever. More critically, the power has shifted, too.  And ‘they’ are no longer in control.

It has been something of an odd couple of weeks, with some of my professional peers either brazenly speaking of lying (PR Week, February 3rd), or offering somewhat antediluvian points of view about what PR really is and how we go about our everyday business. Having recorded the BBC’s The Bottom Line with the erudite Evan Davis on Wednesday, I was fascinated by the content and tone of the two edits: the slightly ill-tempered exchanges on the radio version were thankfully usurped by the more thoughtful, directional and content-rich discussion on the broadcast edition.

Does all this matter – or are these merely the narcissistic ramblings of an introspective bunch of PR people? Well, yes, it does matter – and here’s why:

As one of the central tenets of Citizen Renaissance argues, the construction and the approach of the communications industry for the past fifty years or so has contributed significantly to the mess and the muddle in which we now find ourselves. We see this manifest in the historical inversion of the Wants & Needs relationship; the consumerisation of everything, not least in politics; and a relentless drive towards super-consumption that is simply unsustainable, both for our own wellbeing and the finite resources of the planet.

Yet, communications can – and must – be a powerful agent of change, especially in the post-Crisis world. However, no such change is possible if the communications industry itself does not get its house in order first. [click to continue…]

A Footnote Posting

February 10, 2010

There are two silent – but nonetheless brilliant, contributors – without whom Citizen Renaissance would not be possible: Arabella Bakker and Antoine Soussaline. Jules and I are deeply indebted to them both. Arabella helped prepare and organize much of the work for the CBI Climate Change conference at the end of last year – a [...]

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Looking Again at The State We’re In

January 25, 2010

I have been doing a lot of reading and thinking around the subject and nature of Trust, as we prepare to launch the 2010 Edelman Trust Barometer in London and in Davos this week.
It will come as no surprise to many to learn that – as with the interim Barometer, published in the summer of [...]

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Inverting The Power Pyramid

December 4, 2009

Preparing some notes for a panel session at next week’s CBI forum on Climate Change, I am struck by how top-down the world still really is and suddenly alarmed that I remain in a narrow minority of those wishing and willing to embrace bottom-up democracy and ride the chaos of new networks.
The CBI intro blurb [...]

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The Genetic Mis-Disposition of Airmiles Andy

October 26, 2009

If the Republic Blog’s reporting of Andrew Windsor’s speech about Bankers’ Bonus’ is accurate, then his words simply beggar belief:
“I was brought up to do this sort of work. It is training, experience and genetics. We offer consistency and regularity. We have been around for a long time and will be around for a long [...]

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President Dave and His Goats

October 6, 2009

The fundamental re-alignment of British politics, the death of the two-party system and the reform of both the House of Lords and even the monarchy could be an accidental by-product of British voters not understanding what the Conservative Party actually stands for.
Latest Edelman Trust and polling data, carried out by Populus for discussion at this [...]

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Milton Friedman is Dead

September 27, 2009

Re-reading Milton Friedman’s September, 1970 article in The New York Times Magazine or watching him interviewed on US TV offers a comforting sense of personal, philosophical and political re-assurance – and an affirmation that years of unfettered Thatcher-Reagan economics really were that destructive on the material wellbeing of the planet and its people. The Gordon [...]

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Rules Gone Wrong

September 20, 2009

Sir Andrew Foster, former CEO of The Audit Commission, called this week for what seemed like a radical (and welcome) inversion of the relationship between Citizen and State. The State, he argued, has continued to build years, if not generations, of increasingly irrelevant policies based on the fundamental principles of the Welfare State without offering [...]

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Gordon’s Rainbow Bridge to a Better World

July 22, 2009

Gordon Brown’s surprise descent into the world of TED Global was a clear coup for the Curators but left the audience – sceptical Brits at least – with a sense that this was more a pitch for life after the Premiership than it was a genuine strategy for wellbeing reform.
Certainly, the words were right and [...]

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